227 52 8MB
English Pages 256 [260] Year 1969
American Public Health Association VITAL AND HEALTH STATISTICS MONOGRAPHS TUBERCULOSIS
Tuberculosis I. Tuberculosis Morbidity and Mortality and Its Control Anthony M. Lowell
II. Tuberculous Infection Lydia Β. Edwards and Carroll E. Palmer
1969 / HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, Massachusetts
© C o p y r i g h t 1969 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College All rights reserved Distributed in Great Britain by Oxford University Press, L o n d o n This material has been copyrighted to insure its accurate q u o t a t i o n and use. Permission to reprint may be granted upon presentation of an adequate statement concerning the material to be used and the m a n n e r of its incorporation in other texts. SBN 674-91135-0 Library of Congress Catalog Card N u m b e r 79-82296 Printed in the United States of America
Contents
Foreword by Berwyn F. Mattison
xvii
Preface by Esmond R. Long
xxi
Notes on Tables and Figures
xxv
l/TUBERCULOSIS MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY AND ITS CONTROL
1
Anthony M. Lowell
Author's Preface
3
1/Tuberculosis in the United States and Programs for Control
5
Notes on the History of Tuberculosis Development of Administrative Control: The Pioneers Development of Administrative Control: Voluntary and Governmental Activity Tuberculosis in the United States since 1900: An Overall View State-federal Tuberculosis Eradication Program in Cattle 2/Classification of Tuberculosis and Trends in Treatment Classification of Tuberculosis Trends in Treatment Casefinding Hospital Admission Chest X-ray Program Facilities for Tuberculosis Care Hospitalization Cost
5 9 12 15 20 22 22 23 29 31 31 37
3/Reporting and Registration of Tuberculosis; Size of the Tuberculosis Problem; Trends in Tuberculosis Morbidity
40
Reporting and Registration of Tuberculosis Cases Size of the Tuberculosis Problem Trends in Tuberculosis Morbidity
40 43 45
vi/CONTENTS New Active Tuberculosis Cases by Age, Color, and Sex Geographic Distribution Dynamics of Tuberculosis
49 56 65
4/Tuberculosis Mortality in the United States
67
Tuberculosis Mortality since 1900 Tuberculosis among Children Tuberculosis Mortality, 1959-61 The Chances of Death from Tuberculosis Seasonal Variation in Mortality
67 74 75 81 82
5/Tuberculosis and the Environment Socioeconomic and Environmental Factors Occupation Level of Educational Attainment 6/Tuberculosis in Foreign Countries
84 84 87 92 94
7/Discussion
101
Statistical Appendix
104
ll/TUBERCULOUS INFECTION Lydia Β. Edwards and Carroll E. Palmer Authors' Preface 1/Tuberculin Testing Programs Navy Recruit Program Surveys in Special Groups 2/Tuberculin Reactors among Navy Recruits Changes with Time Place of Residence Mobility of Residence Race Contact with Tuberculosis Foreign Residence
123
125 129 129 134 135 135 140 152 154 156 163
CONTENTS/vii 3/Tuberculin Reactors in Special Groups Surveys in School Children and College Students Community-wide Surveys 4/Summary and Conclusions APPENDIX A/Cleaning and sterilization of supplies used for tuberculin testing APPENDIX Β / D a t a on age-representativeness of white Navy recruit population APPENDIX C/Detailed tuberculin test results for Navy recruits and special survey groups References /1 Additional References/I References/II Index
167 167 168 176 180 182 183 205 218 221 223
Tables/I
1.1
Leading causes of death, Old N e w York ( M a n h a t t a n Bronx)
1.2 2.1
Bovine tuberculin testing: United States, 1917—65 Chest X-rays taken for tuberculosis casefinding: United States, 1946-60 Federal and non-federal hospital facilities for the care of tuberculosis, rated capacity, beds occupied: United States, 1954, 1961, 1963, 1965, 1967 Tuberculosis hospitals, beds, admissions, and average daily census: United S t a t e s — p u b l i c and private hospitals, 1 9 2 5 - 5 3 ; non-federal hospitals, 1 9 4 6 - 6 7 Average length of stay in days, non-federal tuberculosis hospitals: United States, 1 9 4 5 - 6 7 Tuberculosis clinics in the United States, 1960 Reasons for closure or conversion of non-federal tuberculosis hospitals: United States, 1 9 5 4 - 6 1 Payroll and other expenses, non-federal tuberculosis hospitals: United States, 1 9 4 5 - 6 7 Estimated n u m b e r of cases on tuberculosis registers: United States, D e c e m b e r 31 of specified year Newly reported tuberculosis cases (active and inactive) a n d deaths: Continental United States, 1 9 3 0 - 6 1 T r e n d in new active tuberculosis cases and deaths: United States, 1 9 5 3 - 6 7 Newly reported tuberculosis cases: United States, 1 9 5 1 - 6 7 F o r m and extent of disease of new active tuberculosis cases: United States, 1967 Percent of new active pulmonary tuberculosis cases by stage of disease: United States, 1 9 5 3 - 6 7 N e w active tuberculosis cases; number and case rate by age: United States, 1 9 5 3 - 6 7 N e w active tuberculosis cases; n u m b e r and case rate by color and sex: United States, 1 9 5 3 - 6 7 N e w active tuberculosis cases by age, color, and sex: United States, 1 9 5 9 - 6 1 New active tuberculosis case rates by age, color, and sex: United States, 1 9 5 9 - 6 1 Range of new active tuberculosis cases by counties: United States, 1965
2.2
2.3
2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7a 3.7b 3.8a 3.8b 3.9 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5
and
Tuberculosis mortality in the United States since 1900 Tuberculosis death rates by age, sex, and color: expanding death registration states, 1900—65 Leading causes of death: United States, 1965 Tuberculosis deaths and death rates by type of disease, according to race and sex: United States, 1 9 5 9 - 6 1 Age-adjusted death rates for tuberculosis, all forms, by color,
8 21 30
33
34 35 36 37 38 45 46 47 48 48 50 51 52 55 59 61 68 69 71 77
TABLES/¡x
4.6
4.7
5.1
5.2
5.3 5.4 5.5
6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 A. 1 A.2 A.3 A.4 A.5 A.6 A.7
sex, and broad age groups according to geographic division, type of residence, marital status, and nativity (for white only): United States, 1959-61 Chances per 1,000, at birth, of eventually dying from tuberculosis, by sex and color: United States, 1939-41, 1949-51, and 1959-61 Chances of eventually dying from tuberculosis and average years of life gained by its elimination as a cause of death, by age, sex, and color: United States, 1959-61 Coefficients of correlation between tuberculosis, "poor" housing, family income and race indices in health areas: New York City, 1949-51 Selected factors associated with new active tuberculosis case rates; number and percent of counties within each case rate group: United States, 1962-65 Tuberculosis mortality by industry among men 2 0 - 6 4 years of age: United States, 1950 Tuberculosis mortality by occupation level among men 2 0 - 6 4 years of age and color: United States, 1950 Educational differentials in mortality from tuberculosis and from all causes of death for white males at ages 25 and over: United States, 1960 Tuberculosis new cases and case rates in countries of the western hemisphere, 1960-62 Tuberculosis deaths and death rates in countries of the western hemisphere, 1960-62 Tuberculosis new cases and case rate in Africa, Asia, and Oceania, 1960-62 Tuberculosis deaths and death rates in Africa, Asia, and Oceania, 1960-62 Tuberculosis new cases and case rates in European countries, 1960-62 Tuberculosis deaths and death rates in European countries, 1960-62 Tuberculosis hospitals, type of control, number of beds, and average daily census: United States, 1942-53 New active tuberculosis cases; number and case rate for each state: 1952, 1957, 1961, 1965, and 1967 Percent of new active pulmonary tuberculosis cases by extent of disease by state, 1967 New active tuberculosis cases by form and extent of disease: each state, 1967 Number of counties according to level of case rate group: average for 1962-65 Tuberculosis; number of deaths and death rates for each state: 1952, 1957, 1961, and 1965 Tuberculosis age-adjusted death rates by color and sex for each deaths state, and 1959-61
79
81
83
85
86 90 91
93 95 96 98 98 99 100 104 105 106 107 108 109 110
x/TABLES Α.8 A.9 A. 10 A. 11 A. 12
Tuberculosis deaths, by state: United States, 1959-61 Tuberculosis death rates, by state: United States, 1959-61 Tuberculosis deaths, by residence, standard metropolitan statistical areas, 1959-61 Age-adjusted death rates for tuberculosis: standard metropolitan statistical areas, 1959-61 Crude death rates for tuberculosis: selected countries of low mortality, 1950-1965
111 112 113 117 121
Tables/II
1 2
3.A
3.Β
4
5
6
7
8
Navy recruit population, by age, race, and residence (tested 1958-64) Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by test period (white, ages 17-21) Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime residents of counties included in the specified metropolitan areas (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime residents of counties included in the specified metropolitan areas (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for residents of New York City, by race, type of residence, and borough (tested 1958—63) Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime one-county residents of metropolitan areas, farms, and other non-metropolitan areas, by state (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) Number of Navy recruits tested, percent with household contact with tuberculosis, and percent of recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for contacts and non-contacts by state (ages 17-21, tested 1960-64) Summary statistics on history of household contact with tuberculosis, and frequency of tuberculin reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for white and Negro recruits and for white student nurses (recruits, ages 17-21, tested 1960-64) (student nurses, ages 17-24, tested 1943-49) Number tested and percent of Navy recruits, not conterminous U.S. residents, with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by age, color, and place of residence
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139
143
144
149
150
157
161
165
TABLES/xi
Appendix Β B.l B.2
U.S. Navy recruits, by age at time of test (white, tested 1958-64) Percentage of all white males, aged 17-21 during 1958-64, who were skin-tested as Navy recruits
182 182
Appendix C
C.l C.2
C.3
C.4
C.5
C.6
C.7
C.8
Distributions by sizes of reactions to 0.0001 mg PPD-S for all Navy recruits tested 1958-64 Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime residents of counties included in metropolitan areas (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) Distributions by sizes of reactions to 0.0001 mg PPD-S among Navy recruits by state, for metropolitan, farm, and other nonmetropolitan residents (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) Number of Navy recruits tested, and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by type of residence, by state (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) Distributions by sizes of reactions to 0.0001 mg PPD-S for Navy recruits by state, race, and type of residence (ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) Number of Negro Navy recruits tested, and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by type of residence, by state (ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) Distributions by sizes of reactions to 0.0001 mg PPD-S for Navy recruits, tuberculosis contacts, and non-contacts, by state (tested 1960-64) Distributions by sizes of reactions to 0.0001 mg PPD-S for school, university, and community programs, by age and race (tested 1956-64)
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184
188
192
193
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199
202
Figures/I 1.1 1.2 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4
3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 4.1 4.2
4.3
4.4 4.5 5.1 6.1
Tuberculosis, new case rates and death rates, United States, since 1900 Tuberculous infection by age group in the United States population New active tuberculosis case rate and death rate, United States, 1953-67 New active tuberculosis case rates by race and sex, United States, 1953-67 New active tuberculosis case rates by age, United States, 1953-67 New active tuberculosis case rates, by age, color, and sex, children under twenty years of age, United States, 1959-61 New active tuberculosis case rates, by age, color, and sex, United States, 1959-61 Percent distribution by region, new active tuberculosis cases and population, United States, average 1965—67 Tuberculosis cases reported: counties and large urban areas, United States, 1965 New active tuberculosis case rates by county, average 1962-65 Tuberculosis in the United States, 1966 Tuberculosis death rates, by color and sex, United States, since 1910 Male tuberculosis death rate by age, years 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960, United States (expanding) death registration area Female tuberculosis death rate by age, years 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960, United States (expanding) death registration area Tuberculosis death rate, children under fifteen, New York City, since 1898 Death rates for influenza and pneumonia and for tuberculosis, by month: United States, 1959-63 Selected factors associated with tuberculosis, proportion of counties within each case rate group, 1962-65 Tuberculosis death rate in various countries, between 1930 and 1953
17 19 49 53 54
57 58 61 63 64 65 70
72
73 76 83 87 97
Figures/ll 1 2
Field record card: Navy recruit skin-testing program Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more
130
xiv/ FIGURES mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S: A. tested 1949-51; B. tested 1958-64 (white, ages 17-21) 3 Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, tested in 1949-51 and 1958-64 (white, ages 17-21) 4 Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for those tested during different periods in the 1958-64 program, and for comparison, those tested in 1949-51 (white, ages 1 7 21) 5 Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, tested in 1958-60 and 1963-64 (white, ages 17-21) 6 Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by State Economic Area (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) 7 Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime residents of counties included in large metropolitan areas (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) 8-A Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime residents of counties included in metropolitan areas with populations of one million or more (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) 8-B Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime residents of counties included in metropolitan areas with populations of one million or more (white, ages 17—21, tested 1958-64) 9 Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for: A. lifetime residents of metropolitan and nonmetropolitan counties; B. non-metropolitan residents, according to lifetime farm and other residence (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) 10 Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime one-state residents, and all other residents (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) 11 Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by region (U.S. Bureau of the Census), by race (ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) 12 Percent of Negro Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S (ages 17-21, tested 1958-64)
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155
FIGURES/xv 13
14
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21
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23
Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for whites and Negroes (ages 1 7 - 2 1 , tested 1 9 5 8 - 6 4 ) Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with history of contact with tuberculosis, and new tuberculosis case rates (white recruits, ages 17—21, tested 1 9 6 0 - 6 4 ; new case rates—white population, 1959-61) Correlations by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, with new tuberculosis case rates for: A. recruits with no history of contact with tuberculosis; B. recruits with history of contact with tuberculosis (white recruits, ages 1 7 - 2 1 , tested 1 9 6 0 - 6 4 ; new case rates —white population, 1 9 5 9 - 6 1 ) Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, who have a history of household contact with tuberculosis, as a percentage of all recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm (white, ages 1 7 - 2 1 , tested 1 9 6 0 - 6 4 ) Percent of Navy recruits, U.S. residents, with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by color, place of birth, and residence (ages 1 7 - 2 1 , tested 1958-64) Percent of Navy recruits, U.S. residents, with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for foreign-born, and for U.S.-born with some foreign residence, by place of foreign residence (white, ages 1 7 - 2 1 , tested 1 9 5 8 - 6 4 ) Percent of school children and college students with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, in specified places throughout the United States, by race and age (tested 1956-64) Percent of school children with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by age and sex, and for comparison, percent reactors among college students and Navy recruits (white children and college students, tested 1 9 5 6 - 6 3 ; white recruits, tested 1958-64) Percent of community residents with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.001 mg PPD-S, by age (white, tested 1 9 5 6 - 6 0 ) Percent of community residents with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by age, sex and race (tested 1 9 5 6 - 6 0 ) Percent of Polk County, Minnesota residents with
156
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159
160
164
164
169
170
171
172
xvi/FIGURES
24
reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by age, residence, and sex (tested 1960) Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S by place of residence (for white recruits only), and by color, place of birth, and contact with tuberculosis (for all recruits) (ages 1721, tested 1958-64)
Foreword
Rapid advances in medical and allied sciences, changing patterns in medical care and public health programs, an increasingly healthconscious public, and the rising concern of voluntary agencies and government at all levels in meeting the health needs of the people necessitate constant evaluation of the country's health status. Such an evaluation, which is required not only for an appraisal of the current situation, but also to refine present goals and to gauge our progress toward them, depends largely upon a study of vital and health statistics records. Opportunity to study mortality in depth emerges when a national census furnishes the requisite population data for the computation of death rates in demographic and geographic detail. Prior to the 1960 census of population there had been no comprehensive analysis of this kind. It seemed appropriate, therefore, to develop for intensive study a substantial body of death statistics for a three-year period centered around that census year. A detailed examination of the country's health status must go beyond an examination of mortality statistics. Many conditions such as arthritis, rheumatism, and mental diseases are much more important as causes of morbidity than of mortality. Also, an examination of health status should not be based solely upon current findings, but should take into account trends and whatever pertinent evidence has been assembled through local surveys and from clinical experience. The proposal for such an evaluation, to consist of a series of monographs, was made to the Statistics Section of the American Public Health Association in October 1958, and a Committee on Vital and Health Statistics Monographs was authorized. The members of this Committee and of the Editorial Advisory Subcommittee created later are: Committee
on Vital and
Health Statistics
Mortimer Spiegelman, Chairman Paul M. Densen, D. Sc. Robert D. Grove, Ph.D. Clyde V. Kiser, Ph.D. Felix Moore George Rosen, M.D., Ph.D.
Monographs
William H. Stewart, M.D. (withdrew June 1964) Conrad Taeuber, Ph.D. Paul Webbink Donald Young, Ph.D.
xviii/FOREWORD
Editorial Advisory
Subcommittee
Mortimer Spiegelman, Chairman Duncan Clark, M.D. E. Gurney Clark, M.D. Jack Elinson, Ph.D.
Eliot Freidson, Ph.D. (withdrew February 1964) Brian MacMahon, M.D., Ph.D. Colin White, Ph.D.
The early history of this undertaking is described in a paper that was presented at the 1962 Annual Conference of the Milbank Memorial Fund.* The Committee on Vital and Health Statistics Monographs selected the topics to be included in the series and also suggested candidates for authorship. The frame of reference was extended by the Committee to include other topics in vital and health statistics than mortality and morbidity, namely fertility, marriage, and divorce. Conferences were held with authors to establish general guidelines for the preparation of the manuscripts. Support for this undertaking in its preliminary stages was received from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Milbank Memorial Fund, and the Health Information Foundation. Major support for the required tabulations, for writing and editorial work, and for the related research of the monograph authors was provided by the United States Public Health Service (Research Grant CH 00075, formerly GM 08262). Acknowledgment should also be made to the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company for the facilities and time that were made available to Mr. Spiegelman, now retired from its service, who proposed and administered the undertaking and served as general editor. The National Center for Health Statistics, under the supervision of Dr. Grove and Miss Alice M. Hetzel, undertook the sizable tasks of planning and carrying out the extensive mortality tabulations for the period 1959— 1961. Dr. Taeuber arranged for the cooperation of the Bureau of the Census at all stages of the project in many ways, principally by furnishing the required population data used in computing death rates and by undertaking a large number of varied special tabulations. As the sponsor of the project, the American Public Health Association furnished * Mortimer Spiegelman, "The Organization of the Vital and Health Statistics Monograph Program," Emerging Techniques in Population Research (Proceedings of the 1962 Annual Conference of the Milbank Memorial Fund; N e w York: Milbank Memorial Fund, 1963), p. 230. See also Mortimer Spiegelman, "The Demographic Viewpoint in the Vital and Health Statistics Monographs Project of the American Public Health Association," Demography, Vol. 3, No. 2 (1966), p. 574.
FOREWORD/xix
assistance through Dr. Thomas R. Hood, its Deputy Executive Director. Because of the great variety of topics selected for monograph treatment, authors were given an essentially free hand to develop their manuscripts as they desired. Accordingly, the authors of the individual monographs bear full responsibility for their manuscripts, and their opinions and statements do not necessarily represent the viewpoints of the American Public Health Association or of the agencies with which they are affiliated. Berwyn F. Mattison, M.D. Executive Director American Public Health Association
Preface
Tuberculosis, once the chief cause of death in our population, and more recently the principal fatal infectious disease in the middle years of life, has dropped in the last two decades to low levels of morbidity and mortality. It has by no means gone from our midst, however, and a penetrating assessment of its recent and current significance as a public health problem is needed to place it in proper perspective. Such an assessment we now have in this two-part volume, which is one of a series of monographs on vital and health statistics brought out under the sponsorship of the Statistics Section of the American Public Health Association. This volume presents a picture, statistically oriented, of tuberculous infection, morbidity, and mortality. Each of these aspects of the total problem must be considered for a comprehensive evaluation of the progress being made in controlling this still prevalent malady. Tuberculosis was a disease of the utmost gravity in colonial times and early years of the United States republic. In those years, in both the cities and most populated rural areas, it accounted for at least a fifth of all deaths each year. As many as 500 per 100,000 of the population died from it annually in the cities of the eastern seaboard. Rates were similar in comparable regions in other parts of the world. It is noteworthy, though, that throughout the years of industrial development and improving standards of living a slow but steady decline in the prevalence of the disease took place. This was at first without the benefit of an effective specific therapy, but a time came when such therapy was available, and with its use the decline accelerated. In the accelerated decline in tuberculosis mortality the results of organized effort in its control are clearly evident. Much of the work in the early years of the twentieth century was by voluntary bodies of dedicated citizens without medical training, as well as by public-health minded physicians. Goals were first measured in terms of declining mortality, and when the death rate dropped, in the mid-1920's, below 100 per 100,000, it was a time for celebration for these devoted workers. Their efforts were heavily reinforced in later years by increased state, local, and federal participation in tuberculosis programs, and the deaths from tuberculosis have now reached the astonishingly low average rate of 4 per 100,000 per year.
xxii/PREFACE
As the mortality rate dropped, attention was focused more sharply on the case rates, as determined by representative mass studies of significant segments of the population. New goals were established, and voluntary and official forces alike attacked the tuberculosis problem with this more refined measure of accomplishment. Case rates were found to be dropping too, although generally not so rapidly as the mortality rates. More difficulties attended this type of evaluation, because of deficiencies in reporting and lack of general agreement on what constituted a case. The next step logically was determination, as precisely as possible, of the prevalence of tuberculous infection in the population, as revealed by the tuberculin test. This index, too, has its pitfalls, but by and large it furnishes the best measure we have of the total hazard, present and future, from tuberculosis. These three elements in evaluation of the course of progress in the decline of tuberculosis in the United States, that is, mortality, case rates, and the frequency of old and new infections as established by the tuberculin test, form the subject matter of the monograph here made available for students of the epidemiology of tuberculosis. In Part I Anthony M. Lowell has presented an extraordinarily detailed summary of the past history of tuberculosis and medical and administrative measures that have been applied in its control. The account includes sections on improvements in treatment and facilities for care, methods for prevention, procedures in case finding and registration of cases, and a wealth of material on changes in the extent and character of tuberculosis in the last decade, in relation to age, sex, race, place of residence, economic state, environment, and other factors. An abundance of documentation of statements and conclusions is set forth in numerous figures and tables. Little that one would wish to know, in the respects named, cannot be found in this huge assemblage. The account is largely confined to objective facts, but occasionally the author ventures into some consideration of the future in the light of past experience, in such statements as this: "Today there is ample evidence that tuberculosis can become a rare, if not extinct, disease in the United States by the end of the twentieth century." Certain epoch-making events are conspicuous in the story, such as the requirements of case reporting (1897ff), the founding of the National Tuberculosis Association (1904), the establishment of a Tuberculosis Control Division in the U.S. Public Health Service (1944), and the recent (1963) completion of a task force report containing recom-
PREFACE/xxiii
mendations for a ten-year plan raising the level of tuberculosis control through federal project grants to states. In all these events there was a remarkable alignment of the forces of the voluntary and official agencies in tuberculosis control. Lowell's account includes a relatively brief but broadly representative bibliography, marked by special attention to original sources. Part II, by Lydia Β. Edwards and Carroll E. Palmer, deals with tuberculosis infection rates as determined by the tuberculin test. It approaches the general problem on a somewhat different basis, that is, the authors' own research on the acquisition of tuberculosis infection and on its manifestations and their significance. Their report represents the culmination of a long and a highly detailed examination of some 600,000 adolescents and young adults from all parts of the country. The study, in the authors' words, had as its objective "a nationwide picture of tuberculous infection." The largest group of persons covered in the study was a half a million Navy recruits who were tuberculin tested as part of a cooperative program between the medical service of the U.S. Navy and the Tuberculosis Program of the U.S. Public Health Service. The most striking finding after a decade of study, as the authors note, is the low rate, about 4 percent, of tuberculin reactors in the group as a whole. This country's texts on tuberculosis, most of which antedate today's circumstances, generally place the tuberculin reaction rate at a much higher figure. Indeed the situation is improving so rapidly that, in the authors' opinion, the rate of new infections with tubercle bacilli in the group studied might now (that is, 1968) be substantially less than one per thousand per year. Such a low rate would have been inconceivable in even the most optimistic forecasts in the first half of the century. The Edwards—Palmer account, in addition to its yield of noteworthy averages, such as those cited, reveals significant differences in rates of infection as affected by varying circumstances, including age within the rather narrow range studied, race and sex, place of residence (that is, metropolitan and nonmetropolitan), and known contact with tuberculosis patients. As an overall summary, the authors were in a position to state that the Navy recruit population, which was believed to be representative of the same age group in the general population, could be separated into two categories: a relatively low-rate group, composed of native-born white recruits without a history of contact with tuberculosis, and a relatively high-rate group composed of nonwhites, tuberculosis contacts, and recruits born and raised abroad.
xxiv/PREFACE
As in the case of Part I, the report of findings in Part II is documented by a wealth of tabular material and charts. Standardized materials and procedures were used throughout the long, meticulous study. The nature of these is set forth in several detailed appendices. These two parts of the monograph supplement each other admirably, bringing together in a single volume a comprehensive picture of the epidemiology of tuberculosis in the United States today, as disclosed, on the one hand, by a statistical study of its general mortality and number of living patients, and, on the other, by a highly detailed study, by the best of modern methods, of that subtle infection that might or might not, under certain circumstances, lead to overt tuberculous disease. Esmond R. Long Henry Phipps Institute University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Notes on Tables and Figures
1. Regarding 1 9 5 9 - 1 9 6 1 mortality data: a. Deaths relate to those occurring in the United States (including Alaska and Hawaii); b. Deaths are classified by place of residence (if pertinent); c. Fetal deaths are excluded; d. Deaths of unknown age, marital status, nativity, or other characteristics have not been distributed into the known categories, but are included in their totals; e. Deaths were classified by cause according to the Seventh Revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Injuries, and Causes of Death (Geneva: World Health Organization, 1957); f. All death rates are average annual rates per 100,000 population in the category specified, as recorded in the United States census of April 1,1960; g. Age-adjusted rates were computed by the direct method using the age distribution of the total United States population in the census of April 1, 1940 as a standard. 1 2. Symbols used in tables of data: — Data not available; ...Category not applicable; - Q u a n t i t y zero; 0.0 Quantity more than zero but less than 0.05; * Figure does not meet the standard of reliability or precision: a) Rate or ratio based on less than 20 deaths; b) Percentage or median based on less than 100 deaths; c) Age-adjusted rate computed f r o m age-specific rates where more than half of the rates were based on frequencies of less than 20 deaths. 3. Case rates and death rates are annual rates per 100,000 mid-year population in the categories specified. 4. Geographic classification: 2 a. Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSA's): except in the New England States, "an SMSA is a county or a group of contiguous counties which contains at least one city of 50,000 inhabitants or more or 'twin cities' with a combined population of at least 50,000 in the 1960 census. In addition, contiguous counties are included in an SMSA if, according to specified criteria, they are (a) essentially metropolitan in character and (b) socially and economically integrated with the central city or cities." In N e w England, the Division of Vital Statistics of the National Center for Health Statistics uses, instead of the definition just 1
Mortimer Spiegelman and H. H. Marks, "Empirical Testing of Standards for the Age Adjustment of Death Rates by the Direct Method," Human Biology, 38:280 (September 1966). 2 Vital Statistics of the United States, I960 (Washington, D.C.: National Center for Health Statistics, 1963), Vol 2 (Morality), Part A, Section 7, p. 8.
x x v i / N O T E S O N TABLES AND
FIGURES
cited, Metropolitan State Economic Areas (MSEA's) established by the Bureau of the Census, which are made up of county units. b. Metropolitan and nonmetropolitan: "Counties which are included in SMSA's or, in New England, MSEA's are called metropolitan counties; all other counties are classified as nonmetropolitan." c. Metropolitan counties may be separated into those containing at least one central city of 50,000 inhabitants or more or twin cities as specified previously, and into metropolitan counties without a central city.
Part I / Control
Tuberculosis Morbidity and Mortality and Its
Anthony M. Lowell
Author's Preface
By the historical method alone can many problems in medicine be approached profitably. For example the student who dates his knowledge of tuberculosis from Koch may have a very correct, but he has a very incomplete appreciation of the subject. Sir William Osier ( 1849-1919) The history of tuberculosis as a cause of illness and death in the United States during this century is in many respects easier to document than is the case for other diseases. State and city archives are replete with accumulated statistical information, much of it untapped and unevaluated. However, availability of these rich reservoirs of data exacts penalties when it becomes necessary to choose without bias and with objectivity those few facts which are of significance in research on tuberculosis. In Part I the status of tuberculosis as an important morbid condition in the United States is reviewed by going beyond a mere examination of current vital and health statistics. Taken into account are trends of the disease, significant concepts of modern treatment and epidemiology, facilities available for the care of tuberculous patients, how the reporting and registration of tuberculosis deaths and cases developed, and a brief recapitulation of the more important milestones in the history of the disease in this country. Statistics that contribute to a better understanding of tuberculosis as it exists today are given special emphasis, but it is true that a serious student of the problem will want to investigate original sources. References at the end of the book were selected to document the major statements included in the text and to suggest sources of information but were not intended to be bibliographic in scope. The author acknowledges the invaluable assistance given by Helen Anglin, Elizabeth Hughes, and Carole Long of the Tuberculosis Program with the compilation of statistical data. January 1969
Anthony M. Lowell
1
/
Tuberculosis in the United States and Programs
for Control
NOTES ON THE HISTORY OF
TUBERCULOSIS
Commentaries on tuberculosis in America during the colonial period and the nineteenth century reflected an acceptance of it as an ubiquitous scourge of humanity which was a common inheritance of the poor and rich alike.1 Today, there is ample evidence that tuberculosis can become a rare, if not extinct, disease in the United States by the end of the twentieth century. Tuberculosis is an ancient disease with a lineage that can be traced to the earliest history of mankind. 2 That it was extant in remote antiquity is affirmed by findings among Egyptian and Nubian remains of bone deformities characteristic of tuberculous disease. Percival Pott (1714— 1788), 3 a distinguished British surgeon, described this form of tuberculosis in 1779 and it was subsequently named after him. The writings of Hippocrates (c. 460-377 B.C.), the "father of medicine," gave an excellent clinical account of the disease.4 Tuberculosis was well known in the ancient Mediterranean world, where it was diagnosed and treated by Greek medical men, among others the imperial physician Galen (130—200 A.D.), who practiced in Rome and whose great authority profoundly influenced medical thought of the Middle Ages and remained unchallenged for twelve centuries. 5 Historians note that in India the medical luminary Susruta (c. 500 A.D.) mentioned the "royal disease" in his writings. In the period of the Renaissance, Girolamo Fracastoro (1483—1553), regarded by some as the first epidemiologist, recognized the contagious nature of tuberculosis. In the last millennium tuberculosis has been universally distributed among all branches of the human race. 6 Understanding of tuberculosis in modern terms began in the seventeenth century with the revival of the study of anatomy. The Dutch physician, Franciscus Sylvius (1614-72) deduced from autopsies that "phthisis," a wasting disease, was due to the formation of small, round masses or nodules, which he named "tubercles" and which he believed to be diseased lymph nodes. Somewhat later, Richard Morton (1637— 98), an English physician, first associated autopsy findings with specific traits of the disease. In 1761 Leopold Auenbrugger (1722-1809) of Austria introduced percussion into diagnosis of chest disease, but it
6/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL
was not until René Laënnec (1781-1826), a French physician, invented the stethoscope in 1816 that modern physical diagnosis began. 7 Laënnec and other investigators learned much about tuberculosis, but why this disease process occurred was not demonstrated. Many theories were advanced, among them that tuberculosis was inherited or that the tubercle was a cancer-like destructive growth of certain tissues. Jean-Antoine Villemin (1827-92), a French army surgeon, drawing upon his experience with soldiers, deduced that tuberculosis might be contagious. After some experiments he reported to the French Academy of Medicine in 1865 that tuberculosis was transmissible.8 Robert Koch (1843-1910) of Germany isolated the bacillus Mycobacterium tuberculosis and proved that it was the sole cause of tuberculosis.9 He reported upon his findings on March 24, 1882, before the Berlin Phthisiological Society. This event finally brought about an organized attack against tuberculosis, and it illustrates Sir William Osier's (1849-1919) 10 aphorism that "In science the credit goes to the man who convinces the world, not to the man to whom the idea first occurs." In the colonial period and very early history of this country the acute and devastating epidemics of cholera, smallpox, yellow fever, and many other diseases which accounted for so much sickness and death, overshadowed the slow epidemic caused by tuberculosis. Its progress in time and space was difficult to evaluate, and its infectious nature although suspected by some was questioned or denied by others. The specificity of tuberculosis was not generally accepted until 1882, when Koch discovered the tubercle bacillus. "Consumption, phthisis, scrofula" or the "white plague" was by no means ignored in the contemporary literature of the last century. Much earlier, in fact three hundred years ago, John Bunyan (1628—88) referred to tuberculosis somewhat euphemistically as the captain of the men of death, an invidious distinction it retained until the twentieth century. "The captain of all these men of death that came against him to take him away, was the Consumption, for it was that that brought him down to the grave." (The Life and Death of Mr. Badman) Early in the eighteen hundreds thoughtful men began to study the epidemiology of "phthisis" and recognized that this disease too had an epidemic cycle although its specific characteristics were not well understood. But it was not until elementary record-keeping systems for reporting causes of death and, years later, the official registration of communicable diseases were created that the true extent of tuberculosis was dramatized.
PROGRAMS FOR CONTROL/7
Remedies to cope with so widespread a disease phenomenon were unavailable and workable solutions seemed to be beyond the understanding and capacities of sanitarians and health authorities. This lack of knowledge as to what caused tuberculosis or certainty as to how it was transmitted frustrated attempts at its eradication. The approach to this complex problem was pragmatic at best. At first, progress in containing the profound ravages of tuberculosis was measured by the reduction in the death rate but it was soon realized that this statistical index alone was not entirely satisfactory. It was, therefore, eventually supplemented by the recording of known cases of tuberculosis and the reporting of newly found disease. In 1900, case registration of tuberculosis was carried out in only a few large cities but gradually the practice of reporting communicable diseases expanded to include the whole United States during the fourth decade of this century. Because nationwide vital statistics records were not gathered until comparatively recent times, some idea as to the extent of tuberculosis as a public health problem, in the early part of the nineteenth century, can be deduced from mortality data for a few communities that systematically collected such information. These cities and states were almost entirely in the northeastern part of the country. It appears from published documents that about one fourth of all deaths were due to "phthisis" or "consumption," the old terms for pulmonary tuberculosis. Usually the statistics did not include such forms of nonpulmonary tuberculosis as scrofula, tabes mesenterica, cold abscess, white swelling, lupus, and Pott's disease. The general practice was to mention the latter forms of tuberculosis as separate entities. In Salem, Massachusetts, during the five-year period from 1768 to 1773 "consumption" (pulmonary tuberculosis) accounted for 117 or 18.2 percent of 642 deaths from all causes, and for the period 1799 to 1808 the proportion rose to 25 percent. The "consumption" death rate is estimated to have been around 440 per 100,000 population. 11 Boston, from 1810 to 1820, recorded 1,891 deaths from "consumption," a pulmonary tuberculosis rate of 489 per 100,000 population. Other cities had somewhat similar high rates: New York City (1804—08), 550; Philadelphia (1811-20), 618; Baltimore (1821-30), 392; Providence (1841-45), 501; and Charleston (1822-30), 450. During this era, in large cities, the proportion of deaths ascribed to tuberculosis ranged from 14 to 30 percent. A century ago, tuberculosis was the leading cause of death in most of the large cities in the United States as illustrated by data for New York City (see Table 1.1). For the period 1804 to 1808 the consumption
8/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL Table 1.1
Leading causes of death, Old New York (Manhattan and Bronx)
Five-year Cause of All
period 1804-1808
death
causes
Consumption Convulsions Cholera infantum Marasmus, atrophia Inflammation, chest, lungs Croup Dropsy Casualties, violence Smallpox Typhus, typhoid Yellow f e v e r Dysentery Worms Whooping cough Teething Inflammation, bowels Sprue Dropsy in head Apoplexy Palsy Other causes Population 1806 = 79,653
F i v e - y e a r period 1849 -1853
Annual average Deaths Rate 2,204
2,767
438 188 129 124 101 88 86 79 74 73 54 43 42 36 36 34 26 23 21 19 490
550 236 162 156 127 110 108 99 93 92 68 54 53 45 45 43 33 29 26 24 614
Cause of All
death
causes
Consumption Convulsions Cholera Inflammation, c h e s t , lungs Marasmus, atrophia Dysentery Cholera infantum Dropsy in head Diarrhea Apoplexy Croup Inflammation, bowels, stomach Smallpox Scarlet fever Debility Inflammation, brain Dropsy Heart disease Measles Congestion, lungs Other causes
Annual average Deaths Rate 21,416
3,972
2,322 1,576 1,107 1,077 1,029 956 839 801 651 552 476 470 454 454 432 405 321 258 230 219 6,787
431 292 205 200 191 177 156 149 121 102 88 87 84 84 80 75 60 48 43 41 1,258
Population 1851 = 539,107
Source: Downing, Τ. Κ . , Table of Semicentennial M o r t a l i t y of the C i t y of New York, compiled from The Records of the City I n s p e c t o r ' s Department, comprising the f u l l period from January 1, 1804, to December 31, 1853, New York P u b l i c L i b r a r y .
(pulmonary tuberculosis) death rate was 550 per 100,000 population. Twenty percent of deaths due to all causes were attributed to tuberculosis. A half century later ( 1 8 4 9 - 5 3 ) , the death rates were around 4 0 0 per 100,000 population and about 11 percent of the reported deaths from all causes were due to tuberculosis. In 1849, Lemuel Shattuck ( 1 7 9 3 - 1 8 5 9 ) made what appears to be, in the light of subsequent events, a classic understatement. In the Report of the Sanitary Commission of Massachusetts, 1850, he commented, "Consumption, that great destroyer of human health and human life, takes the first rank as an agent of death; and as such, we deem it proper to analyze more particularly the circumstances under which it operates. Any facts regarding a disease that destroys oneseventh to one-fourth of all that die, cannot but be interesting." 12 Indeed his other observations in this remarkably prophetic document bear repeating: "The causes of this disease, and the means of removal, are the great objects of investigation; and they can be accurately ascertained only by an extensive series of systematic, uniform and exact observations of the external circumstances,—atmospheric, local and personal,—occurring in each case. And we cannot too strongly impress upon local Boards of Health, upon the members of the medical
PROGRAMS FOR CONTROL/9 profession, and upon all others interested, the importance of making a united and energetic effort to obtain such observations concerning every case which occurs in every part of the Commonwealth. Near 3,000 cases, in this State, annually terminate in death; and if they were properly observed, for a series of five, ten, or more years, it is impossible to anticipate the good results which might follow. Possibly,—and even probably,—discoveries might be made which would reduce the annual number of cases, certainly by hundreds, and perhaps by thousands. We shall hereafter suggest a form of a Register of Cases adapted to this object; and the great importance of the disease, and the confident hope that some discovery can be made which will materially abate its melancholy ravages, should arouse us all to action." Although tuberculosis death rates of 400 per 100,000 population were common a century ago, under unusual circumstances even in comparatively recent times very high death rates have been prevalent for short periods of time. In Puerto Rico the tuberculosis death rate was 333 in 1933 when 16 percent of all deaths were attributed to tuberculosis; in the Philippines a rate of 306 prevailed in 1930; in Athens the rate was 4 0 9 in 1935; and the astounding high rates of 575 in Vienna in 1919, and 642 in Budapest in 1919 were reported during World War I years. Until 1941, in the New York City Central Harlem health center district, a densely crowded area with over 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 residents, tuberculosis death rates were well over 2 0 0 per 100,000 population. The tuberculosis death rate was 274 as recently as 1935, or nearly eighty times the rate for the United States in 1968. A Task Force on Tuberculosis Control in the United States, 13 appointed in 1963 by the surgeon general of the U.S. Public Health Service, to consider the unsatisfactory situation in tuberculosis control and to recommend steps that might be taken to remedy it, prepared a report that in essence and spirit reiterated Mr. Shattuck's concern. It emphasized that tuberculosis is still a stubborn and tenacious adversary—a continuing burden to society. DEVELOPMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE CONTROL: THE
PIONEERS
T w o men, Dr. Hermann M. Biggs ( 1 8 5 9 - 1 9 2 3 ) in New York 14 and Sir Robert W. Philip ( 1 8 5 7 - 1 9 3 9 ) in Edinburgh, 1 5 were prime movers in establishing organized systems for the control of tuberculosis. T h e first tuberculosis dispensary in the world was opened by Sir Robert in Edinburgh in 1887, which was the nucleus of the "Edinburgh Anti-Tuberculosis Scheme." T h e dispensary initiated what today is a
10/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL vast system of administrative medicine. Two years later in 1889 Dr. Biggs, who in 1914 became the New York State Commissioner of Health, in association with his colleagues T. M. Prudden (1849-1924) and H. P. Loomis (1859-1907), took steps in creating a plan for the administrative control of tuberculosis in New York City. At the behest of the Commissioner of Health, Dr. Joseph D. Bryant (1845-1914), Biggs formulated a statement regarding the contagiousness of tuberculosis, pointing out that it was preventable, not directly inherited and that it was acquired by transmission of tubercle bacilli from the sick to the healthy. The report proposed measures for the prevention of tuberculosis, by protecting the public through a system of official inspection of cattle, disseminating information to the public that a tuberculous person with active tuberculous disease could be a source of danger to his associates, and by the careful disinfection of rooms and hospital wards which had been occupied by "phthisical" patients. 16 Although prominent physicians received with disfavor the recommendations that the Board of Health take action in the sanitary surveillance of tuberculosis, Commissioner Bryant issued a circular prepared by Biggs for physicians and laymen entitled "Contagious ConsumptionRules to be Observed for the Prevention of the Spread of Consumption," dated July 9, 1889. It was the first step in the subsequent nationwide educational campaign against tuberculosis in the United States. In November 1893 the major features of Biggs' report became part of the public health code of the City of New York, and the program adopted by the Health Department on December 13, 1893, formed the nucleus of a complete scheme for the control of tuberculosis. In 1897, in spite of some opposition, the compulsory notification of tuberculosis, both pulmonary and other forms, by all physicians, householders, and others coming in contact with the disease was adopted. These were the first definite actions taken by an agency of local government in attempting to control tuberculosis. Reporting and registration of tuberculosis cases and deaths was soon recognized to be a very important public health function in the control of tuberculosis. Subsequently tuberculosis became a legally reportable communicable disease in all of the states. Because of many technical and administrative difficulties information on the number of newly reported cases for the entire United States did not become available until 1930 (see Chapter 3). In the early part of the nineteenth century the peripatetic Frenchman, Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-59), 1 7 noted that one of the inter-
P R O G R A M S FOR CONTROL/11
esting features of American democracy was a willingness and an ability on the part of its citizens as individuals to initiate social movements for the welfare of the community. He observed that "Americans of all ages, all conditions, and all dispositions, constantly form associations. They have not only commercial and manufacturing companies, in which all take part, but associations of a thousand other kinds,—religious, moral, serious, futile, general or restricted, enormous or diminutive. The Americans make associations to give entertainments, to found seminaries, to build inns, to construct churches, to diffuse books, to send missionaries to the antipodes; they found in this manner hospitals, prisons, and schools. If it is proposed to inculcate some truth, or to foster some feeling, by the encouragement of a great example, they form a society. Wherever, at the head of some new undertaking, you see the government in France, or a man of rank in England, in the United States you will be sure to find an association . . . "As soon as several of the inhabitants of the United States have taken up an opinion or a feeling which they wish to promote in the world, they look out for mutual assistance; and as soon as they have found each other out, they combine. From that moment they are no longer isolated men, but a power seen from afar, whose actions serve for an example and whose language is listened to." Tocqueville's observation has been borne out by the establishment in the United States of numerous nonofficial health agencies for the control of tuberculosis and other diseases.18 Dr. Lawrence F. Flick (1856— 1938) 19 organized in April 1892 the first American voluntary antituberculosis organization, The Pennsylvania Society for Prevention of Tuberculosis. In 1895 he helped to organize in Philadelphia the Free Hospital for Poor Consumptives, and in 1903 established the Henry Phipps Institute, the first institute for tuberculosis research in the United States. 20 Dr. Edward Livingston Trudeau (1848-1915) has been called "the father of the anti-tuberculosis campaign in the United States." Although his interests were largely in the field of research and sanatorium care of tuberculosis, his personal influence was national in scope as was the work of the Trudeau Sanatorium, the Trudeau Laboratory, and the Trudeau School of Tuberculosis located in the Saranac Lake region of upstate New York. Hundreds of physicians who "cured" or studied at "Trudeau" were responsible for spreading throughout the nation the philosophy of good sanatorium care. 21 Dr. S. Adolphus Knopf (1857-1940) of New York 22 was one of the men responsible for the movement that in 1902 launched the Commit-
12/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL
tee on the Prevention of Tuberculosis of the Charity Organization Society of New York City. He focused attention in 1903 and 1904 on the need of a national tuberculosis association. Edward T. Devine (1867— 1948), 23 pioneer in the profession of social work, also of New York, at the beginning of the twentieth century introduced into organized associations a strong lay influence as a complement to that of physicians. Homer Folks (1867-1963), a sociologist and one time Commissioner of Charities for New York City, 1902-03, contributed to the technique of tuberculosis organization and the application of basic principles laid down by Biggs and others. In 1907 through the cooperation of the Russell Sage Foundation he helped organize, under the State Charities Aid Association of New York, the first comprehensive statewide campaign against tuberculosis, a model that was followed by other states. DEVELOPMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE CONTROL: VOLUNTARY AND GOVERNMENTAL ACTIVITY
In the United States, the first private sanatorium was erected in Asheville, North Carolina. Dr. Trudeau established the first sanatorium for the poor in 1884—the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium. The first municipal sanatorium was erected in 1897 at Cincinnati, and the first state sanatorium was opened on October 1, 1898, at Rutland, Massachusetts. A tuberculosis dispensary was established at Philadelphia in 1891 by Rush Hospital for Consumption and Allied Diseases, and under municipal auspices in 1903 at Gouverneur Hospital in New York City. In May 1913, a Division of Tuberculosis was established under the Ohio State Board of Health. However, it took several decades before each state and most large cities had organized tuberculosis control programs under official auspices. 24 The National Tuberculosis Association, 25 a nonofficial voluntary health agency, was organized in 1904 (National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis) to create public understanding and stimulate programs for the control of tuberculosis. This agency is financed by the sale of Christmas seals, a method originated in Denmark in 1904 by Einor Holb0ll, a Danish postal clerk, and introduced in this country in 1907 by Miss Emily P. Bissell (1861-1948) of Wilmington. Since then, efforts of the NTA (from 1968, the National Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Association) have been highly successful in promoting and maintaining public interest in tuberculosis through hundreds of local and state affiliates.
PROGRAMS FOR CONTROL/13
The Sixth International Congress on Tuberculosis 26 held in Washington in 1908, focused on tuberculosis as a worldwide problem and helped promote the idea of an overall national program in the United States. One of the derived benefits of this conclave was the stimulus given to state and local governments to seek legislation for tuberculosis control activities and the building of hospitals and sanatoria. In time a greater proportion of public funds was assigned for tuberculosis. With the increased interest, as governments began to shoulder the institutional burden, the monies involved grew in proportion. The total public appropriations by 1910 had reached more than $9,000,000 annually, of which over $4,000,000 came from the states, almost an equal amount from municipalities, and about $ 1,000,000 from the national government for federal hospitals. By way of contrast, in 1963 it was estimated by the Task Force on Tuberculosis Control that the annual hospital cost for tuberculosis was $335,800,000. Annual expenditures available in 1962 for various activities that could be used for tuberculosis programs were: state and local governments $32,500,000; tuberculosis associations $8,000,000; federal grants to the states $4,500,000. Approximately $20,800,000 in additional funds were needed annually to implement an increased effort that would bring about more rapid progress against tuberculosis. The overall cost of tuberculosis to the nation's economy is estimated to be one billion dollars each year. The direct cost is around $600 million, for research, hospital care, control activities by federal, state, and local health agencies, compensation, and private physicians services; the indirect cost (due to loss of income from death and disease caused by tuberculosis) is estimated at over $400 million. However, the early history of effort toward administrative control on a federal level was not encouraging. In 1917 the Kent Bill, which was amended to provide for a division of tuberculosis in the U.S. Public Health Service, failed to pass, as did similar bills introduced in the next session of Congress. 27 There were no significant developments until soon after Pearl Harbor when the surgeon general, Dr. Thomas Parran (1892—1968), established a small tuberculosis control section in the States Relation Division of the Bureau of State Services. In 1944 the Public Health Service Act (Public Law 78-410) authorized establishment of a tuberculosis control program. It placed upon the Public Health Service the responsibility of administering grants-in-aid to state health departments and of conducting demonstrations and research in tuberculosis. On July 6, 1944, the surgeon general established a Tuber-
14/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL culosis Control Division in the Bureau of State Services of the Public Health Service and it was approved on the same day by Paul V. McNutt (1891-1955), the Federal Security Administrator. Senior Surgeon Herman E. Hilleboe (1906— ), who had been in charge of the Public Health Service emergency tuberculosis program since 1942, was appointed chief of the new division with rank of medical director, in which capacity he served until 1946. Beginning in 1944 casefinding was one of the principal activities of the Public Health Service in tuberculosis control (see Chapter 2). The role of the Tuberculosis Program of the U.S. Public Health Service, since 1960 a branch of the National Communicable Disease Center in Atlanta, has been to exercise leadership in improving tuberculosis control efforts throughout the nation, conduct long-term research investigations, provide professional assistance and promote educational programs, stimulate other organizations and groups to participate in various anti-tuberculosis programs, and give the American public a comprehensive view of the tuberculosis problem as it relates to the nation's health. 28 The Public Health Service provides supplemental fiscal support to state and local health departments for tuberculosis control activities through formula and special project grants-in-aid. Assistance is also given by Tuberculosis Program consultants with the development of tuberculosis programs when such help is requested. The tuberculosis control grant was first authorized by Section 314(b) of the Public Health Service Act, as approved July 1, 1944, to assist states in establishing and maintaining adequate measures for the prevention, treatment, and control of tuberculosis. In order to focus greater attention on the need for casefinding, Congress in the 1955 Appropriation Act (Public Law 83-472), directed that federal formula grants and state and local matching funds could only be used for prevention and casefinding activities. Public Law 87-290, approved September 22, 1961, provided for project grants for tuberculosis control. Furthermore, it specified that these project grants were to be used exclusively for improving services to known tuberculosis patients outside hospitals. Casefinding activities under this authority were to be limited to examination of contacts and diagnosis of suspects known to health departments. The Comprehensive Health Planning and Public Health Service Amendments of 1966 amended the Public Health Service Act to authorize Health Services Development Project Grants for the purpose of
PROGRAMS FOR CONTROL/15 (1) providing services to meet health needs of limited geographic scope or of specialized regional or national significance and (2) developing and supporting for an initial period new programs of health services. Tuberculosis project grants are awarded under the provision of (1) above.* In December 1963, the surgeon general's task force completed its report, which contained recommendations for a ten-year plan to raise the level of nationwide tuberculosis control services through greater federal participation by means of increased formula and project grants to the states. The activities recommended were for services to unhospitalized active cases, inactive cases, and contacts to new active cases; identification of persons at risk through tuberculin testing of schoolchildren and hospital admission X-ray programs; and continuing periodic examination as well as prophylactic treatment of persons at risk of developing tuberculosis. In 1967 there were 82 special tuberculosis projects in operation. The federal appropriations for tuberculosis control had reached $3,000,000 for formula grants and $14,950,000 for tuberculosis project grants. The influence of these activities by the federal government is difficult to assess with precision, but there is ample evidence that control of tuberculosis is being improved, and that there is a resurgence of interest in this disease. One criterion is the number of professional and ancillary personnel added to already established health department tuberculosis programs and supported directly through project grants. On July 1, 1968, there were 2,316 approved positions available to these projects, for 139 physicians, 37 Public Health Service medical officers and 82 Public Health advisors, 689 nurses, 680 clerical personnel, and other persons in a variety of positions augmenting the regular staff assigned to tuberculosis control work in health departments. TUBERCULOSIS IN THE UNITED STATES SINCE
1900:
AN OVERALL VIEW
It is significant that even before the development of public health programs for the control of tuberculosis, the fragmentary evidence available points to a decline in mortality from the disease during the nineteenth century. 29 According to data recited previously for New York * Section 314(e) of the Public Health Service Act, as amended by the Comprehensive Health Planning and Public Health Services Amendments of 1966, Public Law 89-749, and the Partnership for Health Amendments of 1967, Public Law 90-174.
16/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL City (although of uncertain quality), during the first half of that century the death rate fell by about 25 percent; during its second half the rate was cut almost in two but still remained at an inordinately high level.30 In Massachusetts the death rate for tuberculosis of the respiratory system fell from 365 per 100,000 in 1861 to 190 in 1900. It would appear that the improving socioeconomic milieu of the previous century included, among its benefits, a decline in tuberculosis mortality. Socioeconomic factors may have played an even more significant role in the present century, but this would be very difficult to evaluate if, indeed, it is at all possible to do so. Because both these factors and the public health movement were gradual in their development it is not surprising that the trend of tuberculosis mortality up to the late forties of this century was steady—dramatic in slope and not by abrupt drops (see Fig. l.l). 3 1 In the early years public health practice was in transition, undergoing a metamorphosis from the concepts of the sanitary era to those of contemporary epidemiological thinking. Gradually, the state of knowledge and general attitude of both the medical profession and the public began to change and tuberculosis was finally acknowledged to be curable and preventable. Discoveries of new methods and techniques raised the hope that tuberculosis could be controlled and possibly eradicated. Perhaps this early optimism was premature but at least it served as an incentive to spur the social conscience toward a broad and intensive approach to the problem. Sanatorium care, with long periods of "rest cure," was augmented in the nineteen thirties and forties with collapse therapy of the lung by means of surgical procedures. With discovery and introduction of chemotherapeutic drugs into the medical treatment of tuberculosis, during the late nineteen forties and early fifties, the incidence and mortality from tuberculosis began to decline rapidly (see Fig. 1.1). These new antituberculosis drugs brought about changes in therapeutic procedures, which no longer required prolonged stays in sanatoria or special hospitals, where most tuberculosis specialists were to be found. By 1960 there were very few specialists who limited their medical practice exclusively to tuberculosis. By 1967, treatment of tuberculosis with a variety of new drugs had become a complex matter calling for a high degree of medical sophistication. Problems posed by drug resistant organisms require more laboratory support as well as greater use of hospital facilities in the early treatment of the disease. Discovery of the so-called atypical mi-
18/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL croorganisms, which simulate tuberculosis, have added to the difficulties of differential diagnosis. During the early years of the twentieth century in most large cities almost all adults reacted to the tuberculin test, giving evidence that they had been infected with the tubercle bacillus. As late as 1946 this was still true in some sections of the country, but there was growing evidence that a steady decline in the rate of new infection was becoming the common trend. Generally, infection with the tubercle bacillus occurs more frequently in congested parts of the cities and large industrial centers where tuberculosis is more prevalent than in scattered agricultural communities. However, on rare occasions outbreaks of small epidemics are still reported in rural areas. 32 By the 1940's it appeared as if Wade Hampton Frost's ( 1 8 8 0 1938) concept of biological attrition, that the balance of nature was in favor of man against the tubercle bacillus, was being borne out in fact. 3 3 Recent developments in treatment of tuberculosis, with the important adjuvant of new drugs, have reduced tuberculosis mortality. On the other hand, the number of new active cases reported each year continues to decline rather slowly. Several studies show that approximately 75 to 80 percent of these newly reported cases arise from the large pool of persons who were exposed to and infected with tubercle bacilli years ago. The remaining 20 to 25 percent of the new cases reported during a year are the product of very recent infection. It is estimated that out of the total population of about 200 million people in this country, around 25 million would show a positive reaction to a tuberculin test, most of them having been infected prior to the current year. The proportion of the population found to be already infected is small in the younger ages but increases for those persons in the older ages who were exposed to tuberculosis years ago when the probability of becoming infected was much greater. (Figure 1.2 approximates very roughly the situation in this regard about 1960.) As the surgeon general's 1963 task force on tuberculosis pointed out, society cannot permit or tolerate a status quo, when there are at hand the tools that can accelerate eradication of the ancient "white plague." Furthermore, it noted that "Tuberculosis is still a problem of considerable magnitude, that measures for its control are complex, that increased reduction in the incidence of tuberculosis disease and infection is achievable but will require augmented public health efforts, wisely directed."
£
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20/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL
STATE-FEDERAL IN CATTLE
TUBERCULOSIS
ERADICATION
PROGRAM
One of the important achievements in tuberculosis control in the United States has been the virtual elimination of bovine tuberculosis as a serious public health problem. It has been well established that the bovine tubercle bacillus is pathogenic for man and that it can cause all of the forms of tuberculosis the human type of bacillus is able to produce. In the past, mainly during the era when pasteurization of milk was not universally practiced, tuberculous cattle provided an important source of infection in human beings. A half century ago it was not unusual for children to become fatally ill or permanently deformed due to bovine tuberculosis contracted from drinking milk from tuberculous cows. 34 The bovine tubercle bacillus as an etiological agent was clearly differentiated from other types of acid-fast tubercle bacilli in 1898 by Theobald Smith (1859-1934). 3 5 Most animals, whether fish, fowl, or amphibians, may develop tuberculosis, but of a type peculiar to their own species. Wild animals when brought into captivity are more likely to develop the disease than the domestic variety. However, only cattle, swine, and fowl, among domestic animals, are common prey to tuberculosis. The economic loss to the cattle industry and serious threat of bovine tuberculosis to the health of the country brought about action on the state and federal level. In 1917 a national program to eliminate tuberculosis among cattle was instituted under the U.S. Department of Agriculture, although the tuberculin test was used by individual herd owners before the national program. This program included the systematic tuberculin testing of cattle and herds of cattle, prompt disposal of all infected cattle, adequate disinfection, and regulations governing the movement of cattle. It has become a universally accepted procedure. Avoidance of tuberculosis infection from dairy products in the United States has been reinsured by the general pasteurization of milk. In the program when infection in an area was reduced to less than 0.5 percent, that area became accredited. The entire United States became an accredited area in 1940 when the overall rate of infection was 0.46 percent. Whereas in 1918 the tuberculin reactor rate of cattle tested was 4.9 percent, by 1965 this was reduced to 0.08 percent.
P R O G R A M S FOR
CONTROL/21
However, systematic testing of cattle continues in order to prevent possible spreading of the disease (see Table 1.2). Sporadic confined epidemics in cattle in recent years underscore the need for continued supervision. Cattle are usually infected by the bovine type of bacilli, and infrequently by the avian type, but there have been reports to suggest that human type bacilli were transmitted to cattle and other mammals. Table 1.2
Fiscal year Total
Bovine t u b e r c u l i n t e s t i n g :
Cattle tested f o r tuberculosis
United S t a t e s ,
Reactors to tuberculin test Number
'ercent
457 103 149
4,158 724
0 9
20 101 134 143 329 878
645 6 544 13 528
700 670 366 358 384 236 460 ,849 312 364
1917 1918 1919
Fiscal year
1917-65
Cattle tested f o r tuberculosis
Reactors to tuberculin t e s t Number
Percent
3 2 4 9 4.1
1940 1941 1942 1943 1944
12 12 10 9 8
222 229 983 308 894
318 499 086 936 466
56 40 28 17 18
343 702 008 167 338
0.46 0.3 0.26 0.18 0.2
28 709 53 768 82 569 113 844 171,559
4 1 3 9 3.5 3 3 3 2
1945 1946 1947 1948 1949
8 8 8 8 8
105 454 312 29 4 737
480 463 919 423 501
19 19 16 15 17
534 464 666 943 007
0.24 0.23 0.2 0.19 0.19
1 7 9 3 8
1950 1951 1952 1953 1954
9 8 9 9 10
439 847 164 675 234
811 228 265 245 665
17 733 12 353 10 351 10 811 10,886
0.19 0.14 0.11 0.11 0.11
1920 1921 1922 1923 1924
1 2 3 5
1925 1926 1927 1928 1929
7 8 9 11 11
000 650 700 281 683
028 780 176 490 720
214,491 323,084 285 361 26 2 113 206 764
3 3 2 2 1
1930 1931 1932 1933 1934
12 13 13 13 15
845 782 443 073 119
871 273 557 894 763
216 203 254 255 232
932 778 785 096 368
1 1 1 2
7 5 9 .0 1 5
1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
9 9 8 8 8
210 220 976 883 187
810 244 409 813 161
11 14 13 15 18
133 363 974 361 914
0.12 0.15 0.156 0.17 0.23
1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
25 22 13 14 11
237 918 750 108 186
532 038 308 871 805
376 165 94 89 60
623 496 104 359 338
1 0 0 0 0
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965
9 9 9 8 8 7
439 788 219 394 252 123
706 386 298 790 855 667
14 14 10 8 8 5
149 579 940 314 255 608
0.15 0.15 0.12 0.10 0.10 0.08
5 7 7 6 5
Source: Animal Disease Eradication D i v i s i o n , A g r i c u l t u r a l Research S e r v i c e , U. S. Department of A g r i c u l t u r e , Cooperative S t a t e - F e d e r a l Tuberculosis Eradication Program. S t a t i s t i c a l T a b l e s , F i s c a l Year 1966 ( A p r i l 1967).
2
/
Classification
of
Tuberculosis
and
Trends
in
Treatment
CLASSIFICATION OF
TUBERCULOSIS
Although tuberculosis is a communicable disease, it is relatively difficult for tubercle bacilli to invade the body and establish active disease. Most tuberculosis is passed on by airborne transmission of the tubercle bacilli. 1 Primary infection may occur in children or adults; it may remain latent, progress, activate later, or repeatedly relapse. With the onset of primary tuberculosis the tuberculin test becomes positive from three to ten weeks after infection. Childhood is still the most typical age for primary infection, but incidence of infection in children is decreasing. First infection is occurring relatively more frequently in young adults when contact with the adult world becomes much more common than when their normal environment was comparatively limited. Most childhood infections show a benign course and the lesions heal without treatment. With a few exceptions the pattern of development of primary infection is the same in adults as in children. Reinfection disease is considered to include post-primary progression, reinfection, and superinfection; acute forms of the disease, if not treated, may be progressive and fatal. The chronic forms may persist for years with exacerbations, remissions, and relapses. 2 Lesions of tuberculosis are highly diverse in appearance, and their manifestations are numerous. No single system of classification can give information that completely describes the lesions. Certain classifications and descriptions are used, however, for records and statistical purposes. A detailed discussion of the subject can be found in the Diagnostic Standards and Classification of Tuberculosis prepared by the American Thoracic Society, Medical Section of the National Tuberculosis Association. 3 Locally, it may be desirable to modify the generally used classifications and descriptions to serve their special purposes. The term "form of tuberculosis" has two main groupings—pulmonary and extrapulmonary. The basis for classification of pulmonary tuberculosis includes: extent of disease (minimal, moderately advanced, far advanced), status of clinical activity, bacteriologic status, therapeutic status, exercise status. In addition, there are certain optional classifications that can be used to give supplementary information. Classification of extrapulmonary tuberculosis is listed by sites of
CLASSIFICATION, TRENDS IN TREATMENT/23 the disease. Hematogenous (miliary tuberculosis), respiratory passages, serous membranes, cardiovascular system, chest wall, lymphatic system, gastrointestinal system, spleen, urinary tract, genital organs, bones and joints, central nervous system (meningitis), eye, endocrine system, skin. TRENDS IN TREATMENT
Hospital treatment. Before the introduction of modern drug therapy in the nineteen forties the major therapeutic tool in managing clinical tuberculosis was general and localized physical rest. 4 When pulmonary cavities failed to close, surgical procedures generally known as "collapse therapy" were followed. Surgical procedures such as pneumothorax, pneumoperitoneum, thoracoplasty, and paralysis of the diaphragm provided rest for the diseased lung on either a temporary or permanent basis. Physical immobilization of the patient by "bed rest" for a year or more was common. 5 In recent years surgical treatment has become much more selective. Excisional surgery to remove infected areas of lungs is performed, when indicated, in connection with chemotherapy. Collapse therapy is done infrequently and periods of complete physical rest have been drastically shortened, being reserved for those patients who are toxic, febrile, or actively bleeding, or who have bacilli resistant to drugs. The amount of physical activity permitted the patient may be related more to the patient's exercise capability and physical tolerance and, in general hospitals, to the demands for isolation rather than to the fact that he has tuberculosis. Formerly, these therapeutic approaches required long periods of hospitalization, which contributed greatly to the shortage of beds available for new cases. Thus, many states had long lists of patients waiting to be hospitalized. Hospitals and sanatoria were often located in isolated areas far from population centers in accordance with the then-prevalent theory that an abundance of fresh air and complete isolation from the stresses and strains of urban living were necessary in the treatment of the disease. Collapse therapy, an operative immobilization of the diseased lung in the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis, was introduced in the last century and continued in general use well into the fifth decade of this century. James Carson (1772-1843) in 1821 6 was the first to clearly express the fundamental principles of collapse therapy. He wrote, "It has long been my opinion that if ever this disease (phthisis) is to be
24/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL cured, and it is an event of which I am by no means disposed to dispair, it must be accomplished by mechanical means, or in other words by a surgical operation." Marked improvement in a person's condition that occasionally followed a spontaneous pneumothorax, suggested its possible therapeutic application, and it was first made in 1882 by Carlo Forlanini (1847-1918), an Italian physician, 7 and in the United States independently by John Benjamin Murphy (1857-1916) in 1898. 8 Forlanini's original attempt was followed by the development of various surgical procedures to collapse the lung (pneumothorax, oleothorax, pneumonolysis, pneumoperitoneum, phrenic nerve interruption, thoracoplasty), which led to the use of excisional surgery of the lung proper (segmental wedge resection, lobectomy, and pneumonectomy). Each of these procedures had its advocates and periods of popularity. In present-day treatment stress is laid on keeping patients in the hospital at least until they have achieved a noninfectious state. 9 Sputum conversion, the process by which positive sputum containing infectious tubercle bacilli becomes negative and is no longer infectious, under adequate and appropriate chemotherapy, can occur within one to two months after initiation of therapy. Laboratory methods used in the past required 6 to 8 weeks to confirm this change, and at times, prolonged hospitalization. Recently developed laboratory techniques, which shorten the time necessary to demonstrate conversion, appreciably reduce the hospitalization period for patients responsive to conventional drug regimen. 10 Chemotherapy has also changed the character of hospital care for the tuberculous because the patient becomes ambulatory much sooner and is capable of pursuing a variety of recreational and educational activities within the hospital. Potent chemotherapeutic agents have become most effective treatment tools in tuberculosis and antibiotics have revolutionized medical practice. 11 Their origin began with the study of immunology when Élie Metchnikoff (1845-1916) uncovered phagocytosis, the scavenger role of white blood cells, and Paul Ehrlich (1854— 1915) found salvarsan to be a specific remedy against the syphilis microorganism T. pallidum. This use of special chemical compounds against specific causative organisms of disease inaugurated modern chemotherapy. With the discovery in the 1930's of the sulfonamides and numerous derivatives, chemistry made its greatest contribution towards conquering disease. In the discipline of biochemistry, antibiotics, substances originating from living organisms such as molds that are
CLASSIFICATION, T R E N D S IN TREATMENT/25
antagonistic to bacteria, were discovered in the 1940's. Sir Alexander Fleming (1881-1955) discovered penicillin. Selman A. Waksman (1888-) 12 and his associates discovered the potent antimicrobial agent streptomycin in 1943-44. In 1944-45, W. H. Feldman (1892—) and H. C. Hinshaw (1902-) demonstrated the specific effect of streptomycin in inhibiting tuberculosis. 13 Although streptomycin has limitations due to a certain degree of toxicity and resistance to it will develop rapidly by the infecting organism, the difficulties have been overcome by reducing the amount and frequency of the dosage and by combining streptomycin with PAS (para-aminosalicylic acid) and INH (isonicotinic acid hydrazide) in the treatment of tuberculosis. The introduction of isoniazid (INH) in 1952, the most important modern drug in the therapy of tuberculosis, came about with simultaneous discovery of its efficacy in the United States and Germany. 14 Antibiotics are largely bacteriostatic agents or inhibitors of growth, although some are bactericidal or bacteriolytic. Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains which were originally sensitive to antibiotics may develop resistance to drugs, but a culture of an organism that has become resistant to one antibiotic still may remain sensitive to others. This biological phenomenon gives rise to the rationale of multiple drug treatment in tuberculosis. Streptomycin, isoniazid, and para-aminosalicylic acid, primarily in combination, are the most widely used drugs. Other drugs, somewhat more toxic, are employed in treating tuberculosis patients whose organisms are resistant to one or more of the three mentioned above. 15 Shorter periods of hospitalization and decreased incidence rates have reduced the demand for tuberculosis hospital beds. Though physicians sometimes treat patients at home, initial treatment in a hospital is still recommended. The selection of the proper drug combination, isolation of the patient, and his education about the disease are best carried out within the hospital under the close supervision of a medical staff. Hospitalization is mandatory for patients with tuberculosis caused by drug-resistant organisms. Their treatment with potentially highly toxic drugs requires skilled professional supervision and the laboratory services of a modern hospital. In addition, such patients frequently need surgical procedures to supplement their specialized drug treatment program. 16 The tuberculosis patient, faced with having to spend approximately six months in the hospital, frequently experiences a host of social, economic, and psychological problems. Alcoholism among tuberculosis
26/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL patients, for example, is a major institutional problem requiring skillful management. Though the definition of alcoholism varies from one institution to another, some tuberculosis hospitals report that as many as 30 percent of their adult male patients and 10 percent of adult female patients are alcoholic. Many of these, especially the males, are drawn from skid row populations and are single and homeless. Special medical and social services are necessary if these patients are to be persuaded to remain under treatment. Alcoholism among hospital patients is not a new phenomenon. However, the problem is a fairly recent one for tuberculosis hospitals and sanatoria, which now accept more readily the "hard core cases," who previously would have been rejected for disciplinary reasons when tuberculosis beds were scarce. Rehabilitation services, including recreational, diversional, and educational programs, are of considerable value for all long-term patients. Vocational counseling and prevocational exploration can also be utilized to advantage. Out-of-hospital services. The Arden House Conference on Tuberculosis in 1959 recognized that the elimination of tuberculosis is a realistic objective in the United States. 17 To this end, it recommended a program for the widespread application of chemotherapy, as a public health measure, in order to prevent further spread of tubercle bacilli by persons currently suffering from active tuberculosis and to prevent reactivation and spread of the disease by persons who previously had active disease and were inadequately treated. The conference also recommended that state and local health authorities assume responsibility for insuring adequate treatment and rehabilitation of all patients with tuberculosis. Continuity of inpatient and outpatient care is of critical importance if the patient is not to reactivate his disease. The increasing proportion of patients who now receive the bulk of their treatment after leaving the hospital underscores the importance of accurate record keeping and long-term surveillance. 18 In addition to the diagnostic and treatment services provided through outpatient clinics, collaborative arrangements are occasionally developed with community agencies to offer supporting services to the patient and his family, for example, rehabilitation services, home nursing, social services, homemaker services, occupational guidance, and income maintenance. Health department physicians are being called upon increasingly to assume responsibility for supervision of clinical programs and, in some instances, to provide clinical care and related services. Specific efforts,
CLASSIFICATION, TRENDS IN TREATMENT/27 therefore, must be made to keep these physicians abreast of the latest methods of treating tuberculosis. Relaxation of restrictions on hospital and clinic use, of residence requirements, and of the "means test," which determines the patient's ability to pay for his medical care and treatment, has also occurred in some states as tuberculosis beds have become generally available. Chronic nontuberculous pulmonary diseases. The growing proportion of patients in tuberculosis hospitals who are being treated for chronic nontuberculous respiratory diseases may be a factor in the future role of some of these institutions. Information prepared by the Veterans Administration illustrates what probably will emerge as a well-defined trend in most states. The data suggest that within a few years the number of veterans hospitalized for chronic nontuberculous respiratory diseases will equal or exceed the number of hospitalized tuberculosis patients. In 1954, the number of patients hospitalized in Veterans Administration hospitals for tuberculosis was approximately six times the number hospitalized for chronic nontuberculous respiratory disease. By 1961, this relationship had decreased to two times. Later estimates suggest that there might have been an equal number of each type of patient shortly thereafter. Although a decline in the number of tuberculosis patients is partly responsible for this change, there has been a corresponding or greater absolute increase in the number of other chronic pulmonary patients seeking treatment. A certain number of these patients, with nontuberculous pulmonary disease, have always been treated in tuberculosis hospitals. Thus, the trend evidenced by the Veterans Administration data is probably also the situation, in some degree, in many state and local tuberculosis hospitals today. However, the extent of the effect of such patients on the occupancy rates of most tuberculosis hospitals and sanatoria will probably be slight because of their generally shorter periods of hospitalization, the specialized treatment required, and the fact that most of them will be treated in general hospitals. Chemoprophylaxis. The value of preventive treatment for tuberculosis with the drug isoniazid (INH) has been established by the U. S. Public Health Service trials. Current follow-up results of these prophylaxis trials confirm the undiminished effectiveness of isoniazid over the ten years since the trials were started in 1956—57. When isoniazid was taken continuously for one year it decreased the frequency of tuberculosis by at least 75 percent during the year of medication, and by 50 percent each year thereafter. Apparently, use of isoniazid was able to
28/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL nullify the tuberculous infection and thereby destroy the potential for infection to progress into clinical disease in half of the infected population. Because all infected persons are today at considerably higher risk of developing active disease than are the uninfected in the population, the indications for chemoprophylaxis can now be expanded to include all persons known to have had a tuberculous infection. The identification and treatment of tuberculous infection is not a substitute for treatment of patients with active and inactive disease and of contacts, which remain the first priority in community tuberculosis programs. 19 BCG vaccine. BCG (Bacillus Calmette Guérin), a vaccine against tuberculosis, is an attenuated live vaccine that offers some protection to those who have never been infected. The vaccine offers no protection to those already infected, among whom the majority of cases arise in this country. It has limited application in the present-day control of tuberculosis in the United States. 20 BCG was developed by Albert Calmette (1863-1933), 2 1 a French bacteriologist, and Alphonse F. M. Guérin (1816-95), a Paris surgeon. Calmette introduced BCG in France in 1921. The vaccinating procedure met with relatively little acceptance in the United States until 1940 when studies by Dr. Joseph D. Aronson (18 89-195 8) 22 and Dr. Sol R. Rosenthal (1903) 23 showed that under certain conditions it had value. Only a small fraction of the children in this country have been vaccinated with BCG. It is estimated that probably fewer than 60,000 vaccinations with BCG were performed each year in the early 1950's, and these were mostly of hospital staffs and close "contacts" of patients with active disease. 24 Use of BCG vaccination in the United States has been debated for several decades. In 1966, an international panel of tuberculosis specialists, reviewed epidemiologic information relating to the status of tuberculosis in this country, as well as field trials of BCG not only in the United States, but also in Great Britain and other countries. They were fully cognizant of the past positions of the Public Health Service as well as the current views in other countries and of the World Health Organization. In view of the favorable epidemiologic, medical, and socioeconomic conditions prevailing in this country and the effectiveness of chemoprophylaxis, the panel of experts concluded that there was no indication for the use of BCG on a group or community basis in the United States. The recommendations of this committee were approved by the surgeon general of the U.S. Public Health Service.
CLASSIFICATION, TRENDS IN TREATMENT/29
CASE FINDING
Tuberculosis casefinding surveys in this country have had their periods of popularity; formerly, in many cities they were the principal activity of antituberculosis agencies. 25 At a time when there was a great deal of tuberculosis which would normally not be discovered until it became manifest diesease, chest X-ray surveys of the general population were a necessary and important function of health departments. Assistance was given by the Public Health Service to many communities throughout the United States in the conduct of chest X-ray screening programs. Aid was provided through the loan of X-ray equipment and by technical personnel for demonstration and pilot-program purposes, as well as through the assignment of PHS chest X-ray teams to facilitate full-scale casefinding services. By June 1953 approximately 11.8 million X-ray films were taken in connection with local tuberculosis programs which utilized the Public Health Service casefinding resources. 26 The impact of these programs was substantial and they stimulated similar surveys throughout the country. In community chest X-ray surveys conducted from 1947 to 1953 the number of persons with active tuberculosis found in large city surveys ranged from 0.3 to 3.1 cases per 1,000 people examined. Since then, the yield from such surveys of previously unknown and therefore unreported tuberculosis cases has decreased, and the cost of conducting such surveys has increased. Consequently, they are done less frequently or limited to areas where there is a high prevalence of tuberculosis. In many large cities, routine admission chest X-ray programs in municipal general hospitals find a much higher proportion of new active cases per 1,000 persons examined than do community-wide chest X-ray surveys. Although the reported number of films taken is incomplete and excludes X-rays taken by federal agencies, Table 2.1 shows the estimated number of chest X-rays taken for tuberculosis casefinding in the United States from 1946 to 1960. Since then there has been a drop in these totals. Regardless of their casefinding value, X-ray surveys were responsible for introducing the concept of screening examinations to the American public and popularized the idea of X-ray examination for tuberculosis. A number of studies have shown that the search for unrecognized tuberculosis can be most profitable when casefinding targets are those segments of the infected population which are known to produce the greatest amount of tuberculous disease and which can be found with
30/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL efficiency as part of the routine procedures of health department tuberculosis activities. This thesis is substantiated by statistics compiled from state and local special tuberculosis project areas which receive grants from the Public Health Service. 27 Among 30,011 household contacts (people known to have been in close association with cases of clinically active tuberculosis) examined from January to June 1967, 875 new cases of clinically active tuberculosis were found or a rate of 29 cases per 1,000 household contacts. On the other hand, among 36,555 nonhousehold contacts (individuals who were less intimately associated with the active disease cases), 170 cases were found or 5 new active Table 2 . 1
a
Chest X-rays t a k e n f o r tuberculosis caseflndlng: U n i t e d S t a t e s , 1946-60 ( n o t I n c l u d i n g X-rays t a k e n by f e d e r a l a g e n c i e s )
Year
Chest X-rays reported
1946 1947 1948 1949 1950
6,000,000 8,700,000 11,345,000 13,837,000 14,794,000
1951 1952 1953 1954 1955
12,539,000 13,466,000 15,546,000 16,233,000 17,598,000
1956 1957 1058 1959 1960
18,280,000 17,655,000 13,612,000 13,204,000 13,592,000a
I n a d d i t i o n to the 13,592,000 f i l m s t a k e n in c h e s t X-ray c a s e f l n d l n g a c t i v i t i e s r e p o r t e d by t h e s t a t e s , 4 , 4 2 4 , 0 0 0 f i l m s were t a k e n by t h e Army, Navy, A i r F o r c e , and V e t e r a n s A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , making a t o t a l of o v e r 1 8 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 f i l m s i n 1960.
cases per 1,000 nonhousehold contacts examined. In another group of 24,762 persons who were suspected for a variety of reasons of having tuberculosis, including unexplained chest X-ray findings, a diagnosis of tuberculosis was established in 2,704 instances or at a rate of 109 cases per 1,000 people examined. Other examples can be cited to show that selective casefinding can be a highly productive public health procedure. The foregoing casefinding rates for selected groups represent averages for the combined project areas and should not be interpreted to be standards. Specific rates will vary widely from place to place.
CLASSIFICATION, TRENDS IN TREATMENT/31
HOSPITAL ADMISSION CHEST X-RAY PROGRAM
Routine chest X-rays of people receiving service from hospitals can uncover much tuberculosis, because persons who suffer from other illnesses have higher rates of the disease than whose who are well. This proportion has been found to be especially true for both inpatients and outpatients of large city public hospitals. For example, during 1967 in nineteen municipal general hospitals in New York City 245,281 persons were given chest X-rays on admission and 699 were found to have active pulmonary tuberculosis (2.8 per 1,000 examined) not previously registered with the city health authorities; in fourteen voluntary general hospitals 69,173 admission X-rays were taken and 31 new cases found (0.4 per 1,000 examined). The new active tuberculosis case rates for the thirty-three institutions were: inpatients, 3.4; outpatients, 1.5; employees and others, 1.2. The potential benefits to be derived from this type of program can be envisaged from the fact that in 1967, 7,172 registered hospitals of all types, both federal and nonfederal, reported 29,361,424 inpatient admissions; and 148,229,113 outpatient visits in 6,121 hospitals which reported the number of visits. 28 Even though the net total would be less when tuberculosis hospitals and other special or very small institutions were excluded for a variety of reasons and duplications were eliminated, the opportunity to examine so many people provides an established method to discover people with tuberculosis who might otherwise not be diagnosed for some time as having active disease, with consequent delay in medical treatment. Routine hospital admission chest X-ray programs can have other benefits in addition to finding unsuspected tuberculosis. These programs uncover much nontuberculous chest disease (cancer, heart conditions, silicosis, histoplasmosis, and so forth). The program also provides an opportunity to focus attention on other health problems within the household of the tuberculous patient as a result of home visits after an active case of disease is reported to the health department for further epidemiologic follow-up. FACILITIES FOR TUBERCULOSIS CARE
The exact number of institutions in the United States with beds for the tuberculous prior to 1900 is uncertain. During the latter part of the nineteenth century the following were established: Channing Home (Boston, 1857), House of the Good Samaritan (Boston, 1861), Cullis
32/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL
Consumptives Home (Boston, 1864), the Home for Consumptives at Chestnut Hill (Philadelphia, 1876), Mountain Sanitarium for Pulmonary Diseases (Asheville, North Carolina, 1876, Dr. J. W. Gleitsmann), Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium (Saranac, New York, 1884, Dr. Edward Livingston Trudeau), Sharon Sanatorium (Sharon, Massachusetts, 1891, Vincent Y. Bowditch). Other sanatoria organized during this period were: Los Angeles County General TB Ward (1878), Brooklyn Home for Consumptives (1881), Cook County TB Sanitarium (Dunning, Illinois, 1898), Sanitarium Gabriels (1895) and Loomis Sanatorium (upstate New York, 1896), Massachusetts State Sanatorium (Rutland, 1898), Ft. Bayard for Army personnel and Ft. Stanton as a Public Health Service Marine Hospital (New Mexico, 1899). James Blake, F.R.C.S., of San Francisco, following the "Gold Rush" treated consumptives in a summer, tentless camp in the Coastal Range (1855) and in 1876 he set up a short-lived sanatorium on Monte Sol near Livermore, California. According to Godias J. Drolet (1882— 1968), in 1895 there were 19 tuberculosis sanatoria or hospitals with a capacity of 1,450 beds; in 1900, 34 institutions with 4,485 beds {Am. Rev. Tuberc., vol. 14, 1926). The National Tuberculosis Association Tuberculosis Hospital and Sanatorium Directory (1954 edition) states that in 1904, there were 9,107 beds for tuberculous patients exclusive of beds in state mental and penal institutions. Early in this century, sanatoria played an important function in tuberculosis control by providing direct medical care and by isolating patients who would otherwise be sources of infection in a community. Most of the sanatoria in the United States were privately owned, but by mid-century the great majority of such institutions were under municipal, county, or state control, and the character of these institutions was more that of a hospital than a sanatorium. In 1900 there were approximately 4,500 beds for tuberculosis patients; by 1954 the rated bed capacity for tuberculosis was 111,715 in federal and nonfederal hospitals, exclusive of beds in mental and penal institutions (see Table 2.2). In 1967 the total rated capacity fell to 43,069 beds. 29 Every state has some facility or arrangement to provide hospital and clinic care for tuberculosis patients. The extent and character of these differ in that the facilities available may be under private, state, county, city, or other administrative auspices. In addition, the Veterans Administration, the Armed Forces, and the U.S. Public Health Service provide tuberculosis hospitalization for their respective legal beneficiaries. In 1967, federal facilities accounted for 23 percent of the hos-
CLASSIFICATION, TRENDS IN TREATMENT/33 pital facilities for the care of tuberculosis and for 14 percent of the rated bed capacity. Because of the changing modes of care and treatment and the decline in the amount of tuberculosis, the number of institutions assigned exclusively for hospitalization of the tuberculous has decreased. A picture of the trend from 1925 to 1953, a period for which details are available for both public and private institutions, is given in Table 2.3. During the period from 1927 through 1937, there were about 500 public and private tuberculosis hospitals in the United States. Although this number declined gradually to 420 in 1953, the number of beds in such institutions rose meanwhile, particularly after World War II. A more Table 2 . 2
F e d e r a l and n o n - f e d e r a l h o s p i t a l f a c i l i t i e s f o r t h e c a r e of t u b e r c u l o s i s , r a t e d c a p a c i t y , beds o c c u p i e d : U n i t e d S t a t e s , 1954, 1961, 1963, 1965, 1967
Agency 3
1961
1963
1965
1967
669 111,715 95,239
432 67,634 48,856
409 60,363 43,086
387 52,781 36,619
348 43,069 30,028
Non-federal Number of h o s p i t a l s Rated bed c a p a c i t y Beds o c c u p i e d
552 91,640 76,819
345 57,922 40,820
314 51,817 36,084
297 45,332 30,798
267 37,208 25,172
Federal^ Number of h o s p i t a l s Rated bed c a p a c i t y Beds o c c u p i e d
117 20,075 18,420
87 9,712 8,036
95 8,546 7,002
90 7,449 5,821
81 5,861 4,856
F e d e r a l and non-f e d e r a l Number of h o s p i t a l s Rated bed c a p a c i t y Beds o c c u p i e d
1954
S o u r c e : U. S. Department of H e a l t h , E d u c a t i o n , and W e l f a r e , T u b e r c u l o s i s Beds I n H o s p i t a l s and S a n a t o r i a , T u b e r c u l o s i s Program, N a t i o n a l Communicable D i s e a s e C e n t e r , P u b l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e , P u b l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e p u b l i c a t i o n , No. 801, s e r i e s s i n c e 1946. ^ a t a a r e f o r h o s p i t a l s w i t h 10 or more beds f o r t u b e r c u l o s i s . 1 9 6 3 , 1965, and 1967 f i g u r e s f o r f e d e r a l i n s t i t u t i o n s I n c l u d e a l l tuberculosis beds.
b
recent picture of the downward trend in the number of tuberculosis hospitals and their use is evident in the data relating to nonfederal institutions in Table 2.3. Within the brief period of one decade from 1956 to 1967 the number of such institutions and their use was cut by more than half. Of the 105 nonfederal hospitals in 1967, the states controlled 42, counties controlled 45, other nonfederal governmental agencies ran 9, and 9 were controlled by nongovernmental agencies, principally voluntary nonprofit institutions. The federal government had only two tuberculosis hospitals. Details regarding the type of control of tuberculosis hospitals within the period 1942 to 1953 are set forth in Appendix Table A.l. The trend is toward shorter periods of hospitalization.
Table 2.3
Tuberculosis hospitals, beds, admissions, and average daily census: United States - public and private hospitals, 1925-53; non-federal hospitals, 1946-67 (numbers f o r beds, admissions, and average daily census are in thousands)
Public and private Year
Non federal Average daily census
Hospitals
Beds
1925
466
49
—
1927 1928 1929
508 508 502
63 62 61
—
1930 1931 1932 1933 1934
515 509 512 497 495
66 66 70 71 70
81 93 84 82
56 56 60 60 60
1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
496 506 508 493 480
70 74 77 76 76
86 99 102 101 91
61 63 65 66 65
1940 1941 1942 1943 1944
479 477 468 455 453
78 82 82 80 80
91 101 102 92 88
67 71 70 65 63
1945 1946 1947 1948 1949
449 450 441 438 444
79 83 81 82 83
86 100 99 106 113
60 62 63 66 69
1950 1951 1952 1953 1954
431 430 428 420
86 88 90 88
113 107 110 108
72 74 75 75
Admissions
Hospitals' 1 Beds
Admissions
Average daily census
40 51 51
412 411 409 414
75 70 76 78
85 94 112 128
55 55 66 66
398 399 391 384 368
72 73 73 72 74
79 83 76 77 89
62 62 62 62 61
1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
347 315 280 261 254
70 66 62 57 57
87 76 71 69 79
56 53 49 44 45
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964
238 222 203 186 187
52 49 45 39 40
68 65 60 55 62
39 36 33 29 28
1965 1966 1967
178 156 105
37 31 18
52 45 26
26 21 12
Sources : Bureau of the Census, Historical S t a t i s t i c s of the United States, Colonial Times to 1957, Series B215, 216, 267, 268, Washington, D. C. 1961; Hospitals. Journal of the American Hospital Association« Guide issue, August 1968. aData relate to hospitals as defined by the American Medical Association. ^Data relate to hospitals as defined by the American Hospital Association.
CLASSIFICATION, TRENDS IN TREATMENT/35 About half the patients occupying tuberculosis beds on June 30, 1960, were in the hospital less than six months. On the other hand, approximately 25 percent of all patients had been in the hospital continuously for one or more years. An indication of the trend is provided by Table 2.4, which shows the average length of stay in nonfederal tuberculosis hospitals from 1945 through 1967. From a high of almost 300 days of stay per person in 1952, the average dropped irregularly to a low of 165 days in 1964. Table 2.4
Average l e n g t h of s t a y i n days, n o n - f e d e r a l t u b e r c u l o s i s h o s p i t a l s : United S t a t e s , 1945-67
Year
Average length of s t a y i n days
Percent change from previous year
1945 1946 1947 1948 1949
255 7 236.2 213 6 215 7 188 2
- 7.6 - 9.6 + 1.0 -12.7
1950 1951 1952 1953 1954
286 272 298 293 250
5 7 6 9 2
+52.2 - 4.8 + 9.4 - 1.6 -14.9
1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
234 255 251 232 207
9 2 9 8 9
- 6.1 + 8.6 - 1.3 - 7.6 -10.7
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964
209.9 202.2 200 8 192.5 164 8
+ 1.0 - 3.7 - 0.7 - 4.1 -14.4
1965 1966 1967
182 5 170 3 168.5
+10.7 - 6.7 - 1.1
S o u r c e s : U. S. Department of H e a l t h , E d u c a t i o n , and W e l f a r e , Medical C a r e . F i n a n c i n g , and U t i l i z a t i o n . H e a l t h Economics S e r i e s , No. 1, P u b l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e P u b l i c a t i o n No. 947, 1962; and H o s p i t a l s . J o u r n a l of t h e American H o s p i t a l A s s o c i a t i o n . Vol. 4 2 , No. 13, P a r t 2 , August 1 , 1968.
Outpatient care plays an increasingly important role in present day treatment of tuberculosis. In 1960, almost 1,200 tuberculosis clinics were operating within the United States according to agencies reporting to the National Tuberculosis Association (see Table 2.5). Of such agencies, over two thirds were in state and local health departments,
36/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL over one sixth were attached to a tuberculosis hospital, and the rest were variously distributed. Decline in the demand for tuberculosis beds has created problems of converting unneeded tuberculosis hospitals to other health uses or closing them. Many in the tuberculosis field at first failed to recognize the immensity of the impact the new drugs would have on the future of tuberculosis hospitals and were reluctant to convert or close unneeded facilities. Communities sometimes objected to the expected loss of income or employment or were concerned about the type of facility that might replace the hospital. Nevertheless, between 1954 and 1961, some 227 hospitals partially converted the unused portion of their facilities for the care of nontuberculous patients or discontinued all treatment of tuberculosis. By 1968 there was a further reduction in the rated Table 2 . 5
Tuberculosis c l i n i c s in the U n i t e d S t a t e s , 1960
Agency o p e r a t i n g Total Total
clinics
reporting clinics
Health department Local State L o c a l and s t a t e Tuberculosis hospital General h o s p i t a l Tuberculosis association Other Not s t a t e d
of
Number clinics
Percent distribution
1,037 1,176
100. 0
427 164 120 182 58 47 38 1
41. 2 15. 8 11. 6 17. 6 5. 6 4. 5 3 7
S o u r c e : B a i l e y , M. V. , Census of T u b e r c u l o s i s C l i n i c s . N a t i o n a l T u b e r c u l o s i s A s s o c i a t i o n , 1962.
bed capacity of hospitals providing care for tuberculous patients. Major reasons for the changes were the lessened demand for tuberculosis beds, the higher per diem costs of patient care, and the growing pressure on states and communities to provide facilities for the chronically ill, the mentally ill and retarded, and the aged (see Table 2.6). Nationwide statistics on the type of tuberculosis patients cared for are limited and conclusions must be based on newly reported active cases, a large proportion of whom receive their initial treatment in a hospital. Since 1953, as shown elsewhere in this monograph, the stage of pulmonary tuberculosis of new active cases first reported to health departments, has shown only minor variations in the overall pattern for the country. In various hospital reports in which the severity of tuberculous dis-
CLASSIFICATION, TRENDS IN TREATMENT/37 ease is specifically given, it appears that about 80 percent of the patients admitted to most institutions have moderately or far advanced tuberculosis. Of these, 70 percent have positive sputums on admission and are therefore infectious cases. The majority of patients with positive sputum when admitted to a hospital for the first time are infected with tubercle bacilli which are susceptible to treatment with "first line" drugs. However, approximately one third of all tuberculous patients admitted to hospitals are readmissions. These patients have had various degrees and quality of treatment during their earlier hospitalization. In this group, the majority of patients with positive sputum have organisms that are resistant to either or both streptomycin and isoniaTable 2.6
Reasons f o r c l o s u r e o r c o n v e r s i o n of n o n - f e d e r a l tuberculosis hospitals: U n i t e d S t a t e s , 1954-61
Reasons f o r c l o s u r e or conversion
Number of reasons reported
Percent dis trijiutdon
Total
Primary reasons
Total
Primary reasons
Total
438
218
100.0
100.0
Low t u b e r c u l o s i s occupancy r a t e D i f f i c u l t i e s of m a i n t a i n i n g a qualified staff Withdrawal of or i n a d e q u a t e f i n a n c i a l support I n c r e a s e d c o s t of o p e r a t i o n Unsatisfactory physical condition of f a c i l i t y F a i l u r e t o meet l i c e n s u r e s t a n d a r d s The a v a i l a b i l i t y of t u b e r c u l o s i s f a c i l i t i e s elsewhere A l l other reasons
172
151
39.3
69.3
39
4
8.9
1.8
34 68
6 7
7.8 15.5
2.8 3.2
29 15
3 3
6.6 3.4
1.4 1.4
45 36
30 14
10.3 8.2
13.8 6.4
S o u r c e : U. S. Department of H e a l t h , E d u c a t i o n , and W e l f a r e , A r e a wide p l a n n i n g of f a c i l i t i e s f o r t u b e r c u l o s i s s e r v i c e s » P u b l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e P u b l i c a t i o n No. 9 3 0 - B - 4 , 1963. a Excluding Colorado.
zid. Treatment of these patients therefore becomes a much more difficult medical matter. HOSPITALIZATION
COST
In spite of the facts that the average hospital stay for tuberculosis patients is lessening and that the number of tuberculosis hospitals and beds for patients with the disease has decreased sharply, hospitalization is still a major item of public and private expense. According to Table 2.7, the total expenses of nonfederal tuberculosis hospitals was in the area of about $200 million annually from 1955 to 1961, with a decline to $94 million in 1967. Meanwhile, the cost per patient-day in nonfed-
CM yg l-t m
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ΙΛ (h O
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ΙΛ o ^ W α> «a· m ιη ΙΛ ιη 0> ON 0> 0>
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CLASSIFICATION, TRENDS IN TREATMENT/39 eral tuberculosis hospitals rose from $7.22 in 1950 to $22.48 in 1967, notwithstanding a declining case load. Over two thirds of the total cost in 1967 was for payroll expenses. The 1967 cost per patient-day represents an average of a wide range, because costs vary not only from one area to another but in different hospitals within a community. Indicative are data for the tuberculosis units of the New York City Department of Hospitals, where the average cost per patient-day in 1967 was $57.11 but ranged from $42.16 to $118.66. The outpatient average cost per visit for these institutions was $11.29, with a range from $6.75 to $22.47. Since then, especially for care in general hospitals, the cost of hospitalization has risen. Construction of new tuberculosis hospitals has become rather rare, but renovation of old or outmoded facilities is a continuing expense. In the 15 years from 1946 to 1961, the Hill-Burton hospital projects provided 7,142 beds for tuberculosis patients at a total cost of $70,148,000, about 37 percent of which came from federal funds. Of the total beds, 3,366 were in new facilities, costing $37,294,000; 3,776 beds were provided by additions or alternations at a cost of $32,854,000. It was estimated that in 1962 the total cost of tuberculosis hospitalization for the United States was $335,800,000, including care in federal and nonfederal mental, penal, and general hospitals. By 1967, with the reduction of tuberculosis incidence and shorter average hospital stay the cost of hospitalization was estimated to be around $250 million. 30
3
/
Reporting and Registration of Tuberculosis
Size of the Tuberculosis Problem /
/
Trends in Tu-
berculosis Morbidity
REPORTING AND REGISTRATION OF
TUBERCULOSIS
CASES
The success achieved by the application of public health measures is ultimately reflected in the morbidity and mortality rates of a community. Traditionally, the collection and analysis of morbidity and mortality data have been a basic part of public health policy because the government, through its public health agencies, whether local, state, or national, is responsible for the control of contagious diseases. Control of communicable diseases can be accomplished best when the incidence and prevalence information is up to date and there is reasonably good and prompt reporting by the attending physician. A basic plan for reporting and registration of cases which was adopted by the New York City Board of Health in 1893 was not fully implemented for several years. At about that time other cities began to experiment with similar reporting systems. Public awareness of the importance of systematic recording of tuberculosis as a disease was stimulated by a few individuals who recognized the public health importance and urgent need of this type of recordkeeping. Reporting and registration of tuberculosis cases for the entire United States have been attained comparatively recently. Even though the notification of tuberculosis was mandatory in some cities since the early years of the century, there have been, meanwhile, differences from state to state in standards of reporting practice. 1 The primary purposes of tuberculosis reporting are: case supervision, to assure continued medical attention, treatment, isolation, and follow-up of all known cases as long as may be necessary to prevent spread of the disease; contact supervision, to assure the examination of contacts of all known active cases; program management, to provide information for use in determining the extent and characteristics of the community tuberculosis control problem and in evaluating the effectiveness of tuberculosis control measures. A comprehensive tuberculosis register would contain information on all aspects of tuberculosis care and control in the community. It would take into account changes occurring in the different classes of
REPORTING AND REGISTRATION/41 patients by clinical status and whether under private physicians' care, clinic supervision, or hospital care. When considered no longer in need of intensive medical attention, persons would be continued under surveillance in the records system for varying lengths of time. Records would include categories of individuals suspected of being at risk of developing disease, contacts of active cases, tuberculin reactors or recent converters, and others. Although such data are provided and reported upon by state health authorities in general terms, the constant internal changes in registers are difficult to keep up to date. Consequently, it is not possible at present to retrieve information for the total United States. One solution would be to utilize modern computer retrieval systems, which can handle large masses of data with a high degree of efficiency and speed. In a mobile population, a nationwide system to keep track of tuberculous persons as they move from state to state would be an invaluable public health tool. This could also provide a timely inventory of tuberculosis in this country. In connection with its special tuberculosis projects activities, the Tuberculosis Program of the Public Health Service receives semiannual statistical reports from about one thousand reporting areas, which submit data on various aspects of their tuberculosis control programs. One of the computer programs developed in 1966 based on these reports provided current data on school tuberculin testing surveys in 500 counties throughout the country, giving detailed results of the tests and characteristics of the major types of techniques used by health agencies. 2 Because registration of tuberculosis cases is the responsibility and administrative function of local and state health authorities, the published statistics for the earlier years reflected a variety of interpretations as to what constituted a "case." Both active and inactive, new and previously known cases were often included in statistical summaries. Lack of standardization made comparison of data between communities difficult. Development of a standard definition for statistical reporting was a matter of evolution. At present this task has been undertaken by the U.S. Public Health Service. One of the complications in establishing a statistical standard for the entire country was that, since about 1925, there were periodic changes in the clinical classification of tuberculosis. 3 The more recent practice of using new active tuberculosis cases as an index of incidence provides a reasonable measure that presents less variation in definition and gives a more consistent basis for compari-
42/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL
son, both geographic and chronological. 4 Although this index of incidence appears to be adequate for statistical purposes it does not exclude entirely the possibility of bias or error. Differences in clinical interpretations as to what constitutes active disease do occur. The National Tuberculosis Association's diagnostic standards and classification of tuberculosis have been adopted widely and provide a basis for achieving relative uniformity. In 1961 the U.S. Public Health Service recommended that all public health departments require, as a minimum, the reporting of active cases of tuberculosis. Since some health departments may request more than the reporting of new active cases, it was recommended that in such circumstances record keeping be set up so that the health department can identify the active cases among the total cases that are reported. The following were to be included in the term, "new active tuberculosis cases": (1) diagnosed cases with tubercle bacilli demonstrated (all forms: pulmonary and extrapulmonary, both primary and reinfection tuberculosis); (2) diagnosed cases without tubercle bacilli demonstrated but where there is X-ray or histological evidence consistent with active tuberculosis (all forms: pulmonary and extrapulmonary, both primary and reinfection tuberculosis); (3) unexplained pleurisy with effusion. Primary cases with X-ray evidence of tuberculous involvement, as well as those with tubercle bacilli demonstrated, were counted in the "active" category. However, tuberculin converters and infant reactors, without X-ray evidence of tuberculous involvement and without tubercle bacilli demonstrated, were to be excluded. The sequence in which reporting of tuberculosis by the physician and registration of the case by the health department occurs often affects the interpretation of the statistics, as in the case of reporting before or after death. 5 To implement public policy in health matters certain procedures are followed in transmitting vital statistics data. The physician who makes a diagnosis of tuberculosis or attends a person at death must, by law, report this fact to the local or state health authorities. The local health department makes an official record of this fact as part of its registration of communicable diseases and deaths and in turn notifies the state health authorities who transmit the statistics to the U.S. Public Health Service. Only part of the original information is reported from one jurisdiction to the next. It is becoming obvious that much more vital data must be available to national health authorities than is possible with current practices if country-wide planning for tuberculosis control
REPORTING AND
REGISTRATION/43
and eradication is to function effectively. As suggested earlier, a national tuberculosis register service center is one means whereby coordination might be achieved. Feasibility of such a central statistical repository of tuberculosis data which would make possible better administrative management of tuberculosis on a local, state, and national basis is being explored by the U.S. Public Health Service.
SIZE OF
THE
TUBERCULOSIS
PROBLEM
New active cases of tuberculosis provide an index of the impact of the disease in the United States, and deaths are an index of its ultimate toll. However, neither new cases nor deaths adequately reveal the overall size of tuberculosis as a community health problem. Although tuberculosis deaths represent much unnecessary waste of human life, they do not entirely reflect the seriousness of the situation as in days when they were the inevitable sequelae of most cases affected with the disease. New active cases reported each year, the measure commonly used now, do not include relapses of previously reported inactivated cases which are estimated to add another six to seven thousand cases to the total annual incidence. A more appropriate measure of the size of the tuberculosis problem is the number of people who are directly affected by tuberculosis during a given year. Therefore, a realistic assessment of the overall extent of the tuberculosis problem in a community should take into account new active cases reported during the year, persons in whom the disease has reactivated, all other active cases currently in need of treatment or supervision, inactive cases, young children who had recently been infected, individuals with suspicious X-ray findings, as well as others who are considered to be at special risk of developing active disease. Thus, the number affected by tuberculosis in 1963 would have been at least a total of 610,000 persons (110,000 known active cases, an estimated 250,000 inactive cases, and a like number of contacts to newly reported cases). Tuberculosis death statistics, as usually tabulated and published, represent only those persons who were reported to have died from tuberculosis. Other persons may have died with tuberculosis, but had another condition assigned as the principal or underlying cause of death on the death certificate. A study of multiple causes of death in the United States for the year 1955 showed that tuberculosis was mentioned on 21, 331 death certificates: 14,779 times as the underlying or
44/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL primary cause of death and 6,552 times as a contributory cause of death. Another area of concern is the large number of people who are well but still at some risk of developing tuberculosis. An estimated 25 million people in the United States today are believed to have been infected with the tubercle bacillus. An important part of tuberculosis control is to select those tuberculin reactors who are at greatest risk and provide appropriate public health measures to minimize and, if possible, prevent the development of active tuberculosis. Chemoprophylactic use of the drug isoniazid can lower the occurrence of the disease in such cases. Each of the 50 states conducts a tuberculosis control program and has data available on the number of persons under active care or supervision. Local and state tuberculosis registers usually contain records not only of the new active cases reported and currently under care but also of persons whose disease activity has not been determined and of inactive cases under supervision. Because policies and recordkeeping practices differ among states, reports summarizing the type of care received vary widely or are often inadequate, so that a strict comparison between communities is not always possible. However, statistics are reported for a substantial segment of the population in sufficient detail to give an adequate ground for estimates for the United States. During 1967, 45,647 new active tuberculosis cases were reported to state health departments. About 1,600 persons were first reported to public health authorities as new cases of tuberculosis at time of death; other tuberculosis cases were found a relatively short time prior to death. Former patients, whose disease had been inactive for years, returned for additional medical care because their tuberculosis reactivated. These figures are given merely to suggest the complex dynamics of tuberculosis registers. The net result of the many changes that took place throughout the nation during the year is reflected in the tuberculosis statistics of December 31,1967. It is estimated that on the last day of 1967 there were 315,000 cases on all state and local tuberculosis registers, with 77,000 persons classified as having active tuberculous disease. On that day 32,000 of the active disease cases were in hospitals, and 45,000 people with active tuberculosis were under the care or supervision of clinics and private physicians. Many patients with active tuberculosis, who were under medical supervision "at home" at the end of the year, had already completed a recommended short period of hospitalization during the year (see Table 3.1). Therefore, these regis-
REPORTING AND
REGISTRATION/45
ter statistics refer to the status of patients on a specific day and they accordingly represent "point prevalence" figures. In December 1967, about 32,000 or 71 percent of the active cases who were under care "at home" were receiving some form of chemotherapy for tuberculosis. In addition, of the 238,000 "other than active disease cases," 83,000 or 35 percent were on drug therapy or chemoprophylaxis. TRENDS IN TUBERCULOSIS
MORBIDITY
In 1930, a total of 124,940 new tuberculosis cases, both active and inactive, were reported to state health authorities in the United States. The number reported fluctuated from year to year, reaching a high of 137,006 in 1948 (see Table 3.2). It was recognized that these annual figures (active and inactive), which were incomplete in some instances, Table 3 . 1
Type of
E s t i m a t e d number of c a s e s on t u b e r c u l o s i s r e g i s t e r s : s p e c i f i e d year
1960
case
1961
1962
1963
1964
U n i t e d S t a t e s » December 31 of
1965
1966
1967
Total3
330 000
330,000
330,000
320 000
320,000
325 000
320,000
315 000
Active disease
120 000
115,000
110,000
105 000
105,000
100 000
90,000
77 000
58 000 62 000
52,000 63,000
46,000 64,000
44 000 61 000
42,000 63,000
40 000 60 000
37,000 53,000
32 000 45 000
210 000
215,000
220,000
215 000
215,000
225 000
230,000
238 000
Hospitalized Not h o s p i t a l i z e d All other cases
b
t u b e r c u l o s i s r e g i s t e r s i n c l u d e r e c o r d s of t h e a c t i v e c a s e s c u r r e n t l y under c a r e , t h e c a s e s f o r which d i s e a s e a c t i v i t y h a s n o t been determined» and i n a c t i v e c a s e s under s u p e r v i s i o n . A l s o r e t a i n e d on h e a l t h d e p a r t m e n t r o l l s a r e r e c o r d s of p e o p l e who f a l l t o r e s p o n d t o t r e a t m e n t o r who have r e c e i v e d i n a d e q u a t e or i n t e r r u p t e d t r e a t m e n t . Cases w i t h a c t i v i t y u n d e t e r m i n e d and i n a c t i v e c a s e s under c u r r e n t s u p e r v i s i o n .
were necessarily a crude index of incidence. Under the guidance of the Public Health Service the practice of reporting previously unknown new active cases separately was initiated in 1952 as a better way of measuring incidence of the disease. The suggested definition of new active cases was generally accepted and a more uniform standard of practice was thereby established. However, the year 1953 was chosen as a start of analysis for the United States, because it is the first for which data on new active cases were recorded for the entire country with a reasonable semblance of completeness. For the years 1953 through 1961 newly reported active tuberculosis cases include clinically active and probably active pulmonary, nonpulmonary, and unexplained pleurisy with effusion cases. As already indicated, the Public Health Service revised its recommendations on the reporting of tuberculosis in
46/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL Table 3 . 2
Year
Newly reported t u b e r c u l o s i s cases ( a c t i v e and i n a c t i v e ) and deaths: Continental United S t a t e s 3 , 1930-61
New cases
Deaths Number Rate
Number
Rate
1930 1931 1932 1933 1934
124,940 124,858 121,961 114,412 113,020
101.5 100 7 97 7 91.1 89 4
87,509 84,679 78,390 74,842 71,609
71.1 68.3 62.8 59.6 56.7
1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
111,856 107,086 112,394 107,021 103,922
87.9 83.6 87 2 82.4 79 4
70,080 71,527 69,324 63,735 61,609
55.1 55.9 53.8 49.1 47.1
1940 1941 1942 1943 1944
102,984 105,567 117,204 120,253 126,294
78.0 79 3 87 5 89 6 95.0
60,428 59,251 57,690 57,005 54,731
45.8 44.5 43.1 42.4 41.2
1945 1946 1947 1948 1949
114,931 119,256 134,946 137,006 134,865
86 85 94 93 90
8 2 1 8 7
52,916 50,911 48,064 43,833 39,100
39.9 36.4 33.5 30.0 26.3
1950 1951 1952 195 3 1954
121,742 118,491 109,837 106,925 100,540
80 77 70 67 62
4 3 5 5 4
33,959 30,863 24,621 19,544 16,392
22.4 20.1 15.8 12.3 10.2
1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
98,860 90,465 86,861 82,266 75,029
60 2 54 1 51.0 47 4 42 6
14,940 14,061 13,324 12,361 11,429
9.1 8.4 7.8 7.1 6.5
1960 1961
70,124 66,984
39 2 36 8
10,832 9,892
6.0 5.4
a
4 8 s t a t e s and the D i s t r i c t of Columbia.
1961. The new recommendations were adopted by some of the states in 1961 and have been followed by all since 1962, although there was some evidence that not all of the new recommendations were applied uniformly. Obviously the modifications in classification of new active cases recommended by the Public Health Service in 1961 tend to impair comparability of data over time. During the period from 1953 through 1961 the new active cases averaged 77 percent of all new cases reported, both active and inactive, with a yearly range from 76 to 79 percent. New active tuberculosis cases reported annually for the 50 states of the nation (including the District of Columbia) declined from 8 4 , 3 0 4 in 1953 to 45, 647 in 1967 a decrease of 4 5 . 9 percent (see Table 3.3). The new active case rate,
REPORTING AND REGISTRATION/47 Table 3.3
Trend i n new a c t i v e t u b e r c u l o s i s c a s e s and d e a t h s : New a c t i v e c a s e s
Year
Number
Change in cases
Rate
United S t a t e s * ,
Tuberculosis deaths Change in r a t e
Change in deaths
Number
(%)
(%) 1953 1954
84,304 79,775
- 5 4
53.0 49.3
1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
77,368 69,895 67,149 63,534 57,535
-
3 9 3 5 9
0 7 9 4 4
46.9 41.6 39.2 36.5 32.5
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964
55,494 53,726 53,315 54,042 50,874
+ -
3 5 3 2 0 8 1 4 5.9
30.8 29.4 28.7 28.7 26.6
1965 1966 1967
49,016 47,767 45,647
- 3 7 - 2 5 - 4 4
25.3 24.4 23.1
1953-67
-
_ -
_ -
-
_ -
Rate
Change in rate
(%)
7.0
19,707 16,527
4.9 11.3 5.8 6.9 11.0
15,016 14,137 13,390 12,417 11,474
5.2 4.5 2.4 0.0 7.3
10,866 9,938 9,506 9,311 8,303
4.9 3.6 5.3
7,934 7,625 (6,560)
-
_ -
_ -
_ b
-
(%)
16.1
12.4 10.2
9.1 5.9 5.3 7.3 7.6
9.1 8.4 7.8 7.1 6.5
-
5.3 8.5 4.3 2.1 10.8
6.0 5.4 5.1 4.9 4.3
-
4.4 3.9 14.0
4.1 ·9 h (3.3)
17.7
-
-
-
10.8 7.7 7.1 9.0 8.5
-
7.7 10.0 5.6 3.9 12.2
-
4.7 4.9 15.4
-
-
3
D e c r e a s e from 1953 t o 1967 Difference Percent Average a n n u a l decrease
38,657 45.9
29.9 56.4 4 2
(13,147) (66.7) 5.7
(9.1) (73.4) (7.5)
(8.9)
S o u r c e : U. S. Department of H e a l t h , E d u c a t i o n , and W e l f a r e , R e p o r t e d T u b e r c u l o s i s D a t a 196.7. T u b e r c u l o s i s Program, N a t i o n a l Communicable D i s e a s e C e n t e r , P u b l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e P u b l i c a t i o n No. 638, 1969. ^ I n c l u d i n g Alaska and H a w a i i . Provisional.
which was 53.0 per 100,000 population in 1953, dropped by 56.4 percent to a rate of 23.1 in 1967. The year-to-year changes in the number of cases reported within the period 1953 to 1967 range from 0.8 percent to 9.7 percent. There was a small increase in cases reported for 1963, but a downward trend was again evident in the four succeeding years. Table 3.4 shows, in comparison with Table 3.2, the number of new cases for the conterminous United States during each year from 1952 to 1967; in comparison with Table 3.3 there is shown the number of newly reported cases, both active and inactive, for the 50 states and the District of Columbia during each year from 1951 to 1961. A ready view of the trend of the new active case rate for tuberculosis compared with that of its death rate is shown in Figure 3.1. A recent picture of the distribution of tuberculosis according to its form and extent is provided by the data in Table 3.5. Of the 45,647 new active tuberculosis cases reported in 1967, 89 percent (40,699) were cases of pulmonary disease, and 4,415 of the latter were classified as primary tuberculosis. This group of active primary cases, which comprised one tenth of all new active cases reported for the country,
48/TUBERCULOSIS
AND
Table 3.4
Year
ITS
CONTROL
Newly reported tuberculosis cases: United States, 1951-67
Active and inactive cases
Active cases
Total United States 3 Number Rate
Conterminous United States' 1 Number Rate
1951 1952 1953 1954
119,631 111,413 108,285 102,006
77.7 71.2 68.1 63.0
85 607 83 250 78 592
55.0 52.6 48.8
1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
100,341 91,986 88,031 83,158 75,841
60.8 54.7 51.4 47.8 42.8
76 68 66 63 56
245 866 437 000 951
46.4 41.2 39.0 36.4 32.3
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964
70,843 67,745
39.4 37.0
54 53 52 53 50
977 167 698 526 256
30.7 29.2 28.5 28.5 26.4
48 434 47 361 45 189
25.1 24.3 23.0
1965 1966 1967 a Includlng
Alaska and Hawaii, and the D i s t r i c t of Columbia. ^Excluding Alaska and Hawaii.
are mainly children with X-ray evidence of tuberculosis involvement or those with tubercle bacilli demonstrated. Stage of pulmonary disease was reported for 34, 205 cases: minimal, 7,034 (20 percent); moderately advanced, 15,245 (45 percent); and far advanced, 11,926 (35 percent). For the entire country there has been no significant change in these proportions during the period from 1953 through 1967, notwithstanding the change in definition of new active cases introduced in 1961 (see Table 3.6). However, these are nationTable 3.5
Form and extent of disease of new active tuberculosis cases: United States, 1967
Form and extent of disease
Number
Total new active cases
45 647
100.0
Pulmonary With extent s p e c i f i e d Minimal Moderately advanced Far advanced Extent not specified Primary
40,699 34 205 7 034 15 245 11 926 2 079 4 415
89.2
213 693 3 520
9.2
735
1.6
Nonp ulmonary Unexplained pleurisy Other Form not specified
Percent
100.0 84 0
5 1 10 9
100.0 20.5 44.6 34.9
100.0 16.4 83.6
REPORTING AND
REGISTRATION/49
Figure 3.1. N e w active tuberculosis case rate and death rate, United States, 1953— 67.
DEATH:
12.4 10.2
9.1
8.4
7.8
7.1
6.5
6.0
5.4
5.1
4.9
4.3
4.1
3.9
3.3*
N O T E : Logarithmic scale ' P r o v i s i o n a l death rate based on National Center for Health Statistics ten percent sample
wide averages; the proportions vary considerably from one state to another. NEW ACTIVE TUBERCULOSIS CASES BY AGE, COLOR, AND SEX
Almost half of the new active tuberculosis cases reported in the United States during 1967 were persons 45 years or older (see Table 3.7a). Available evidence indicates that several generations earlier the age profile of tuberculosis in this country was different from that for 1967 in that a larger proportion of the active cases occurred at younger periods of life. Of special public health concern is the fact that, in 1967,
50/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL over 20 percent of the new cases occur in younger people and children under 25 years of age, the group among whom the disease is generally considered to be most readily preventable; in 1953, the corresponding proportion was less than 19 percent. Although the total number of new active cases of tuberculosis has decreased, the age distribution for the country as a whole has been about the same each year since 1963. The proportion of nonwhites among the new active tuberculosis cases is rising rapidly, from 26 percent in 1953 to 37percentin 1967. The ratio of male to female cases is about 2 to 1 for the whites and 1.7 to 1 for nonwhites; for each color category, the proportion of males among the new cases increased somewhat from 1953 to 1967. It will be noted in Table 3.7a that the number of new cases at ages Table 3 . 6
Year
Percent of new a c t i v e pulmonary t u b e r c u l o s i s cases by stage of d i s e a s e : United S t a t e s , 1953-67 3 ( t o t a l f o r year = 100.0 percent)
Minimal
Moderately advanced
Far advanced
1953 1954
22.6 22.4
40.7 40.6
36.7 37.0
1955 1956 1957 1958 1959
22.4 22.2 21.8 21.7 21.4
42.1 42.4 42.6 42.3 43.1
35.5 35.4 35.6 36.0 35.5
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964
21.1 20.5 20.7 21.2 21.4
43.1 43.5 43.9 43.3 43.8
35.8 36.0 35.4 35.5 34.8
1965 1966 1967
21.2 20.8 20.5
43.6 44.1 44.6
35.2 35.1 34.9
a
Based on areas f o r which extent of pulmonary t u b e r c u l o s i s was s p e c i f i e d .
under 15 years increased from 1961 to 1963. In part, this may be attributed to improved reporting practices. Figures for the more recent years in this table undoubtedly reflect more accurately the incidence of active primary tuberculosis than the earlier figures. In 1967, almost half of the new active cases of tuberculosis at ages under 15 years were among nonwhites; the proportion fell somewhat to over two fifths at ages 1 5 - 4 4 years, and to over one fourth at ages 45 and over. Tuberculosis becomes increasingly a male problem with advance in age. Whereas males constituted one half of the new active cases at ages under 25 in 1967, their proportion rose to 69 percent at ages 65 and over. From 1953 to 1967, nearly one half of all new active cases of tubercu-
Table 3 . 7 a
New a c t i v e t u b e r c u l o s i s c a s e s ; nutober and c a s e r a t e by a g e : U n i t e d S t a t e s , 1953-67 Age
Year
Total
4 5 - 54
65 and over
31,488 28,663 27,094 23,757 22,308 20,449 18,364 17,217 16,240 15,522 15,097 14,282 13,500 13,000 12,517
25,838 24,642 24,307 22,123 21,934 20,988 19,063 18,470 17,737 17,182 17,496 16,434 15,721 15,650 14,996
11,322 11,552 11,663 11,409 11,423 11,098 10,505 10,469 10,267 9,769 10,231 9,524 9,356 9,296 8,778
1,201 1,190
4,357 2,572
7,867 2,336
4,662 2,065
946 978
3,488 2,100
3,545 1,248
1,411 640
P e r c e n t d i s t r i b u t i o n of c a s e s 3.0 12.4 37 4 30 6 6.1 32 .9 9.5 27 4
13.4 19.2
15-24
Under 5
5-14
84,304 79,775 77,368 69,895 67,149 63,534 57,535 55,494 53,726 53,315 54,042 50,874 49,016 47,767 45,647
2,719 2,679 2,976 2,621 2,405 2,469 2,209 2,198 2,429 3,044 3,080 2,827 2,748 2,551 2,247
2,525 2,654 2,603 2,470 2,213 2,352 2,113 2,190 2,457 2,992 3,405 3,269 3,142 3,077 2,794
10,412 9,585 8,725 7,515 6,866 6,178 5,281 4,950 4,596 4,806 4,733 4,538 4,549 4,193 4,315
19 ,400 9,446
5 84 595
729 688
10,614 6,187
539 529
685 692
1953 1967
100.0 100.0
3 .2 4 .9
1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967
53.0 49.3 46.9 41.6 39.2 36.5 32.5 30.8 29.4 28.7 28.7 26.6 25.3 24.4 23.1
2 5 - 44
Number of c a s e s 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 White male female Nonwhite male female
White male female Nonwhite male female
15 14 16 13 12 12 11 10 11 14 14 13 13 12 11
Case r a t e p e r 4 9.1 9 9.1 1 8.6 8 7.8 4 6.8 5 7.0 0 6.1 8 6.1 8 6.6 7 8.0 9 9.0 7 8.5 4 8.0 9 7.7 7 6.8
100,000 p o p u l a t i o n 49.5 45.5 41.0 35.0 31.3 27.1 22.5 20.5 18.5 18.2 17.1 15.6 15.0 13.4 13.4
67 61 57 50 47 43 39 36 34 33 32 30 29 28 26
7 2 6 3 2 4 1 8 7 3 4 6 0 0 8
79 9 75 0 72 8 65 2 63 5 59 9 53 5 51 1 48 3 46 1 46.2 42 7 40 3 39 6 37 3
82.9 81.9 80.0 76.1 74.0 70.1 64.7 62.9 60.4 56.4 58.2 53.3 51.5 50.4 46.7
22.8 10.6
7 1 7 6
4.1 4.0
8.6 8.4
21 5 12 3
45 0 12 4
62.7 20.9
91.8 50.0
33 7 33 6
23.0 23.3
46.9 46.4
139 7 72 7
195 1 61 6
212.8 79.4
56.4
24 0
53 3
43.7
Percent decline in case r a t e 1953-67
25.3
72.9
60 4
52/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL losis reported in the United States have been contributed by white males, predominantly those at the older ages. In contrast to numbers, new case rates for the nonwhite population are markedly higher than for the white population and particularly so in the case of females. Moreover, the ratio of nonwhite to white case rates is increasing, notwithstanding the downward trend in these rates for each color-sex category. In other words, the pace of decline in these rates has been greater for whites than for nonwhites; from 1953 to 1967, the white population benefited by a 62.3 percent drop in their case rates compared with 45.3 percent for the nonwhite population, as shown in Table 3.7b. A graphic view of the trend in case rates according to color and sex is given in Figure 3.2. For each color category, the rate of decline was somewhat greater for females than for males. In Table 3 . 7 b
Year
New a c t i v e t u b e r c u l o s i s c a s e s ; number and c a s e r a t e by c o l o r and s e x : United S t a t e s , 1953-67 White Male
Nonwhite
Female
Male
Female
Number of c a s e s 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1953 1967
41,159 38,774 37,167 33,599 32,700 30,404 27,363 26,396 25,139 24,325 24,160 22,623 21,455 20,751 19,400
21,055 19,440 18,913 16,718 15,648 14,442 13,043 12,499 11,957 11,687 11,888 10,988 10,269 10,136 9,446
13,056 12,809 12,510 11,783 11,470 11,472 10,489 10,285 10,265 10,526 11,083 10,596 10,595 10,505 10,614
9,034 8,752 8,778 7,795 7,331 7,216 6,640 6,314 6,365 6,777 6,911 6,667 6,697 6,375 6,187
Percent d i s t r i b u t i o n of c a s e s 48.8 25.0 15.5 10.7 42.5 20.7 23.2 13.6 Case r a t e p e r 100.000 p o p u l a t i o n
1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1953-67
59.0 54.4 51.2 45.5 43.6 39.9 35.3 33.6 31.5 30.1 29.4 27.3 25.6 24.5 22.8
29.4 26.6 25.5 22.1 20.3 18.5 16.4 15.5 14.6 14.0 14.1 12.8 11.8 11.5 10.6
156.2 149.1 141.6 129.1 123.3 120.2 107.2 102.6 100.1 100.4 103.4 96.8 94.7 92.4 91.8
102.2 96.3 94.2 81.5 74.6 71.6 64.2 59.6 58.7 61.0 60.8 57.3 56.4 52.6 50.0
Percent d e c l i n e in c a s e r a t e 61.4 63.9 41.2 51.1
REPORTING AND REGISTRATION/53 Figure 3.2 N e w active tuberculosis case rates by race and sex, United States, 1953— 67.
N O T E : Logarithmic scale
1967, the ratio of nonwhite to white rates was 4.0 to 1 for males and 4.7 to 1 for females. The reduction in new active case rates from 1953 to 1967 was slow at ages under 15 years, where the rates were already at a relatively low level. The pace of improvement was most rapid at ages 15-24 years, the rate for 1967 being 72.9 percent under that for 1953. However, the percent decline fell off with advance in age, amounting to only 43.7 percent at ages 65 and over (see Fig. 3.3).
54/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL Figure 3.3. New active tuberculosis case rates by age, United States, 1953—67.
ALL RACES: 53.0 49.3 43.9 41.6 39.2 36.5 32.5 30.8 29.4 28.7 28.7 26.6 25.3 24.4
23.1
N O T E : Logarithmic scale
A more penetrating insight into age variations in the numbers and rates for new active tuberculosis cases according to color and sex is shown in Table 3.8a. These data were prepared through the cooperation of state and city public health authorities, who submitted individual cards for each new tuberculosis case reported during the year 1959, 1960, and 1961 to the Tuberculosis Program of the U.S. Public Health Service for statistical analysis. Cards were received from all states but it was possible to use data only from 30 states and the District of Columbia; they represented 136,664 cases, or 81 percent of the total cases reported for the United States for the three-year period 1959-61. These were distributed according to color and sex on the basis of ratios devel-
Table 3 . 8 a
Age
New a c t i v e t u b e r c u l o s i s cases by age, c o l o r , and sex: United S t a t e s , 1959-61 Number of cases White Total
Both sexes
Nonwhite
Male
Female
Both sexes
Male
Female
A l l ages
166 755
116 397
78 898
37 499
50 358
31 039
19,319
Under 20
19 429
11 164
5 398
5 766
8 265
3 828
4,437
491 620 931 566 228
269 843 1 068 867 720
154 435 546 442 379
115 408 522 425 341
222 777 863 699 508
116 400 433 343 258
106 377 430 356 250
5 6 7 8 9
1 051 952 795 699 599
596 557 467 399 352
298 290 233 200 179
298 267 234 199 173
455 395 328 300 247
216 189 146 139 118
239 206 182 161 129
10 11 12 13 14
531 516 512 510 595
301 274 306 305 340
142 106 137 138 137
159 168 169 167 203
230 242 206 205 255
99 104 99 84 100
131 138 107 121 155
1 1 1 1
770 017 139 349 558
455 552 702 831 960
176 233 326 399 448
279 319 376 432 512
315 465 437 518 598
117 198 203 200 266
198 267 234 318 332
6 4 2 5
836 096 664 833
3 2 1 3
767 371 526 500
1 956 1 200 660 1 582
1 811 1 171 866 1 918
3 1 1 2
069 725 138 333
1 550 808 486 984
1,519 917 652 1,349
20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39
8 10 12 14
994 580 565 379
5 6 7 9
320 181 476 087
2 3 4 5
674 117 088 655
2 3 3 3
646 064 388 432
3 4 5 5
674 399 089 292
1 2 2 3
743 168 756 247
1,931 2,231 2,333 2,045
40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59
14 14 14 13
297 761 683 748
9 10 11 10
624 602 019 512
6 7 8 8
639 974 734 570
2 2 2 1
985 628 285 942
4 4 3 3
673 159 664 236
3 3 2 2
176 027 791 507
1,497 1,132 873 729
60-64 65-69 70-74 75-79
12 11 8 6
078 033 977 084
9 8 7 5
459 880 491 155
7 6 5 3
594 812 400 476
1 865 2 068 2 ,091 1 679
2 619 2 153 1 486 929
1 942 1 614 1 086 661
677 539 400 268
1 85 7 689 185 36
1 060 459 120 21
441 188 75 16
304 134 46 9
137 54 29 7
Under 1 1 2 3 4
15 16 17 18 19 Under 5 5- 9 10-14 15-19
80-84 85-89 90-94 95 and over
1 1 1 1
3 358 1 336 380 73
2 917 1 148 305 57
Source: Based on a sample f o r 30 s t a t e s and the D i s t r i c t of Colunfcia ( 1 3 5 , 6 6 4 cases or 81 percent of the t o t a l cases reported in t h e United S t a t e s ) f o r the t h r e e - y e a r period 1959-61. Dietributicm was based on individual r a t i o s developed f o r whites to nonwhites, and f o r males to females f o r each s p e c i f i c age group. These r a t i o s were computed s e p a r a t e l y f o r each of the three y e a r s .
56/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL oped for each specific age group, treating each of the years 1959, 1960, and 1961 separately. Table 3.8a presents for the first time for the entire country a distribution of new active tuberculosis cases and case rates by color and sex for single years under age 20, in five-year age groups up to 95 years and older. Another important feature of this table is that these new case rates for the 1959—61 period, are based on the population in the 1960 census and may be considered, accordingly, to have greater precision than rates based on estimates of the population for other years. The pattern of the new active case rates for single ages under 20 years according to color and sex is shown in Figure 3.4 and the like rates for five-year age groupings are in Figure 3.5. The new active tuberculosis case rates for each color-sex category reach a low point at ages 10—14 years. As these children reach the late teens and the young adult ages, they move increasingly in a widening environment so that the relative risk of becoming infected with tubercle bacilli and of developing active disease grows. This is reflected in rising case rates up to age 30, after which the grade continues upward at a slower pace to the extreme ages of life (see Table 3.8b). At ages under 5 years, the new active tuberculosis case rates are practically identical for males and females in the case of both the white and nonwhite populations. This changes to somewhat higher rates for females at ages 5—19, but thereafter the rates are consistently higher for males. The relative margin between the sexes rises with advance in age so that the ratio of male to female rates reaches a maximum of 4.5 to 1 at ages 6 0 - 6 4 years for white persons and 3.0 to 1 for nonwhite persons. At ages 65 and over, the sex ratio is of the order of 3 to 1. The ratio of nonwhite to white case rates changes appreciably with advance in age. Under age 35 the case rate for nonwhites is fully five times that for the white population. This ratio falls to 3 to 1 at ages 5 5 59 years and continues to decrease to a little over 2 to 1 at ages 80—89 years. If current trends continue, it seems that tuberculosis will be reduced by relatively the greatest amount first among children. Not only are case rates and incidence rates of infection much lower for children than for adults, but the total amount of serious disease being found among children in recent years is becoming progressively smaller. GEOGRAPHIC
DISTRIBUTION
Variations in the incidence and prevalence of tuberculosis among the states and their political subdivisions arise not only from differences in
REPORTING AND REGISTRATION/59 Table 3.8b
Age
New a c t i v e t u b e r c u l o s i s case r a t e s by age, c o l o r , and s e x : United S t a t e s , 1959-61
Total
Case' r a t e per 100,000' population White Nonwhite Both sexes
Male
Female
Both sexes
Male
Female
33 6
15.5
81.9
103.8
61 2
5 9
6.5
29.6
27.4
31 7
A l l ages
31.0
24.4
Under 20
9.4
6.2
Under 1 1 2 3 4
4.0 13.2 15.7 13.0 10.3
2.6 8.0 10.2 8.4 7.0
2 8 10 8 7
9 1 2 4 3
2.2 7.9 10.1 8.4 6.8
12.1 43.0 48.4 40.2 29.5
12.6 44.4 48.5 39.4 29.9
11 41 48 40 29
4 7 4 9 1
5 6 7 8 9
8.9 8.3 7.0 6.4 5.7
5.9 5.7 4.8 4.2 3.9
5 5 4 4 3
7 8 7 1 9
6.0 5.5 4.9 4.3 3.9
26.9 24.6 20.9 20.2 16.9
25.5 23.6 18.6 18.7 16.1
28 25 23 21 17
2 6 1 7 7
10 11 12 13 14
5.1 5.0 4.8 4.8 7.2
3.3 3.0 3.3 3.3 4.8
3 2 2 2 3
1 3 9 9 8
3.6 3.8 3.7 3.7 5.8
16.1 17.5 15.6 17.0 24.0
13.8 15.0 14.9 13.9 18.9
18 20 16 20 29
4 0 2 0 1
15 16 17 18 19
9.3 12.1 13.3 17.8 22.8
6.3 7.4 9.3 12.4 16.1
4 6 8 12 15
8 2 5 0 2
7.9 8.8 10.0 13.0 16.8
30.1 46.0 43.2 56.2 70.9
22.4 39.2 40.4 43.9 65.6
37 52 46 68 75
8 7 1 1 8
Under 5 5- 9 10-14 15-19
11.2 7.3 5.3 14.7
7.2 4.9 3.4 10.1
7 4 3 9
4 9 0 0
7.1 5.0 4.0 11.1
34.5 22.1 17.8 48.3
34.9 20.7 15.2 41.2
34 23 20 55
2 4 4 2
20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39
27.8 32.4 35.1 38.4
18.7 21.6 23.5 27.2
19 22 26 34
2 0 1 6
18.3 21.1 21.0 20.1
92.1 111.6 124.7 131.6
92.7 118.2 146.3 171.1
91 105 106 96
4 9 2 3
40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59
41.1 45.2 51.0 54.4
30.8 36.1 42.2 45.9
43 55 67 76
2 1 9 6
18.8 17.7 17.3 16.6
132.3 126.7 133.9 134.2
189.4 190.4 207.3 209.6
80 66 62 60
7 8 8 0
60-64 65-69 70-74 75-79
56.4 58.8 63.1 66.4
48.1 51.6 56.9 60.6
81 84 89 92
1 6 2 3
18.1 22.6 29.4 35.4
147.5 138.4 142.4 141.9
225.0 217.9 216.9 211.6
74 66 73 78
2 1 7 3
80-84 85-89 90-94 95 and over
70.8 63.9 68.8 50.4
65.7 58.9 60.2 48.2
99 89 100 90
9 7 2 7
41.0 38.9 37.2 27.1
148.1 128.8 171.9 63.1
221.4 202.9 260.1 87.0
85 67 112 46
4 5 2 7
population size but also from differences in their composition according to age, sex, color, and other demographic characteristics. There are, in addition, a multiplicity of social and environmental influences, differing from one community to another, that bear upon the size of a local tuberculosis problem. Because of these sources of variation— demographic, social, and economic—direct comparisons of the tu-
60/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL
berculosis situations between aggregates of population must be tempered. For many years, case rates for individual states were deemed adequate for planning overall programs designed to control tuberculosis. This traditional use of state case rates is no longer appropriate because they obscure problems of specific areas within a state or even a county where the disease may be concentrated. Although case rates are suited for the statistical analysis of a widespread disease, in planning programs for tuberculosis control, it is necessary to pinpoint the actual number of cases that occur in a small geographic area in order to obtain an operating basis to ascertain needed clinic and hospital facilities as well as many other health and welfare services. As an example of the wide range of the tuberculosis problem among the states, some data for 1967 may be cited. In that year, the number of new active tuberculosis cases ranged from 5,069 in New York State to only 31 in Wyoming (see Appendix Table A.2). The eight states with the largest numbers—New York, California, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Texas, Michigan, Florida, and Ohio—accounted for more than half of the total for the country. Collectively, during 1965-67 the states of the north central region had proportionately fewer new active cases than the number of people, as shown in Figure 3.6. On the other hand, the states of the south as a unit accounted for the highest proportion of new cases, namely 39 percent, but for only 31 percent of the population. The active tuberculosis case rates among the states in 1967 ranged from a high of 45.7 per 100,000 population in Hawaii to a low of 5.5 in Iowa. The national average case rate was 23.1; eight states had rates less than 10, and two states and the District of Columbia had rates of 40 or more. Alaska classified more than half of its new pulmonary active cases as minimal and somewhat less than that proportion were so classified by Hawaii, Utah, and Montana (see Appendix Tables A. 3 and A.4). On the other hand, well over half of the new pulmonary active cases were considered far advanced by Idaho and Iowa. Beginning in 1962, data on new active tuberculosis cases were reported to the Public Health Service for over 3,000 counties. Table 3.9 shows that, in 1965, no new active cases of tuberculosis were found or reported to health departments in 614 counties with 2.9 percent of the nation's population. These figures should not suggest that there was no tuberculosis present among the 5.7 million persons in these counties, nor can it be assumed that no tuberculosis developed during the year.
REPORTING AND REGISTRATION/61 Figure 3.6. Percent distribution by region, new active tuberculosis cases and population, United States, average 1965-67. NORTHEAST
Old inactive cases that reactivated and developed into active tuberculosis during the year were not recorded in the new case figures if they had been officially reported as "new cases" in earlier years. The 614 counties, with no new cases in 1965, are scattered throughout the nation, but most of them are located in the north central, plains, and Rocky Mountain states. In a few, the number of residents was relatively large, but generally their population was small. It should be emphasized that the above figures refer to 1965 only and that cases of tubercuTable 3.9
Range of new a c t i v e t u b e r c u l o s i s c a s e s by c o u n t i e s :
Range of new cases in county All counties 0 1-9 10-99 100-499 500+
Counties
Population 1 9 6 5 ( e s t
• )
United S t a t e s ,
1965
New c a s e s reported New case Number Percent rate
Number
Percent
Numbe r
Percent
3,084a
100.0
193 , 795,000
100. 0
49,016b
614 1,721 670 70 9
19.9 55.8 21.7 2.3 0.3
5,655,000 41,153,000 72,585,000 29,894,000 24,508,000
2. 9 21. 2 37. 5 25. 7 12. 7
0 6,194 17,406 13,977 10,931
100.0
25.3
0.0 12.8 35.9 28.8 22.5
0.0 15.1 24.0 28.0 44.6
a I n c l u d e s a r e a s c o r r e s p o n d i n g t o c o u n t i e s , b u t h a v i n g n o o r g a n i z e d county government. ^ I n c l u d e s 508 c a s e s i n m i s c e l l a n e o u s a d m i n i s t r a t i v e a r e a s .
62/TUBERCULOSIS AND ITS CONTROL losis were reported in many of the counties in earlier and following years. Over half the new cases in 1965 were located in 79 counties, each with at least 100 such cases; these counties, which include all of the major cities and conurbations, contained almost two fifths of the total population of the country. The wide geographic variation in the number of new active cases reported among the counties is shown in Figure 3.7. The combined data for 1962 through 1965 provided a reasonably reliable base for computing representative county case rates for the four-year period (see Fig. 3.8 and Appendix Table A.5). For this purpose, it was necessary to use population estimates prepared mainly by state and local agencies because there is no national source for estimates covering all counties in the country. Very high new case rates will be noted for many counties containing Indian reservations in those parts of Appalachia designated as poverty areas and in areas along the Mexican border. Although their rates are high and many of these counties are small in population and the numbers of new active cases are small, they do present important problems for tuberculosis control. However, in general the new active case ratio tends to rise with increasing concentration of population. Thus, in 1965 the new active case rate was 45.4 per 100,000 population in cities of 500,000 or more, 31.5 in cites of 250,000 to 500,000 population, 28.8 in cities of 100,000 to 250,000, and 19.4 in all other areas. On the other hand, these residual areas contained over half of the new active cases in 1965, and the cities of 500,000 or more had somewhat less than one third of the total. The wide range in size and varying demographic characteristics of counties and cities and the great differences in the number of cases emphasizes the need for adjusting tuberculosis control programs to specific requirements of local conditions. This geographic pattern of tuberculosis was established decades ago and shows very little prospect of being changed without an accelerated and intensified effort to eliminate the remaining seedbeds of infection and disease. One particular type of program may not necessarily be appropriate for all communities even if they are of similar size. The number of cases and the rates in Appendix Table A.2 show that each state benefited by a reduction in its tuberculosis problem from 1952 to 1967. However, care should be taken in interpreting state morbidity changes from one time to the next because occasionally the data are affected by and may reflect increased casefinding activities.
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Table Α.2
New active tuberculosis cases; number and case r a t e f o r each s t a t e :
State
1952
Number of cases 1957 1961 1965
1967
United States
86 700
67 149
53 726
49 016
45 647
Conterminous United States
45 189
1952, 1957, 1961, 196} and 1967
Case rate per 100 .000 populat ion 1952 195 7 1961 1967 1965 55 4
39 2
29 4
55 0
39 0
29 2
25 3
23 1
25 1
23 0
85 607
66 437
53 167
48 434
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Col orado Connecticut Delaware D i s t r i c t of Columbia Florida
1 375 743 1 409 1 481 8 232 495 935 149 1 217 2 002
1 547 431 841 822 6 288 412 502 139 655 1 716
1 313 255 694 905 4 916 306 325 158 513 1 359
1 417 302 573 649 4 577 274 335 141 536 1 521
1 379 110 436 49 7 4 171 256 4 lia 122 423 1 601
44 379 167 79 69 35 45 44 151 64
5 1 1 5 9 9 6 0 0 2
48 189 75 "5 44 24 21 33 84 40
7 0 6 8 2 3 8 1 4 4
39 108 48 50 30 16 12 34 65 25
5 1 6 2 0 6 7 3 9 9
40 113 36 33 24 14 11 28 66 26
6 1 4 4 9 1 8 0 8 2
38 40 26 24 22 12 14 23 52 26
9 4 5 9 1 7 1 3 4 5
Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Haine
1 947 350 173 4 481 1 683 506 461 2 276 1 748 380
1 417 281 91 5 123 1 419 293 429 1 800 1 298 224
1 268 304 82 4 021 1 152 165 240 1 257 1 055 159
1 269 280 52 3 250 1 119 166 242 1 193 931 142
1 223 348 55 2 999 1 069 150 223 1 071 966 120
53 68 29 50 40 19 23 77 61 41
9 0 7 5 6 2 4 7 4 8
37 48 14 53 31 10 20 61 41 23
0 0 2 6 3 7 2 2 6 8
31 46 12 39 24 6 10 41 32 16
4 0 0 9 5 0 9 1 2 1
28 39 7 30 22 6 10 37 26 14
9 4 5 5 9 0 8 6 2 4
27 45 7 27 21 5 9 33 26 12
1 7 8 6 3 5 8 4 3 2
Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire
1 830 1 723 4 066 821 1 139 2 086 192 225 121 149
1 608 1 600 2 950 677 784 1 561 244 210 90 98
1 374 1 275 2 690 474 612 1 092 103 160 81 86
1 234 969 2 199 419 661 1 043 133 141 189 48
1 187 910 1 930 394 616 882 109 121 147 44
73 37 61 27 52 52 32 17 66 27
1 3 3 0 3 0 2 2 9 9
55 32 39 20 36 36 36 15 35 17
9 8 1 4 8 7 9 1 0 0
43 24 33 13 27 25 14 10 25 13
7 8 9 7 6 2 7 9 6 9
34 18 26 11 28 23 18 9 43 7
9 1 4 8 6 2 9 7 5 1
32 16 22 10 26 19 15 8 33 6
2 8 4 9 3 2 6 4 4 4
New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island
2 234 680 11 386 1 565 206 5 124 1 165 598 4 720 347
1 806 469 8 535 1 210 116 3 269 778 495 4 947 271
1 658 329 6 182 1 040 88 2 503 465 425 3 732 165
1 674 288 5 869 1 276 49 1 729 605 361 2 686 140
1 455 248 5 069 1 247 49 1 548 442 322 2 736 148
44 91 74 37 33 62 53 37 44 43
1 0 7 8 6 9 4 5 8 5
32 53 52 27 18 35 34 28 45 31
2 9 7 2 4 2 2 5 2 7
26 33 36 22 13 25 19 23 32 19
9 3 0 3 8 2 4 2 9 2
24 28 32 25 7 16 24 18 23 15
7 4 4 9 5 9 7 6 2 7
20 24 28 24 7 14 17 16 23 16
9 5 2 6 8 7 6 3 4 5
South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wi s cons in Wyoming
862 140 131 385 153 171 960 223 141 058 56
734 153 1 681 2 729 136 89 1 519 959 755 888 60
692 123 1 425 2 429 66 83 1 833 653 688 713 40
758 166 1 356 2 583 88 42 1 754 488 518 560 21
716 119 1 199 3 209b 65 44 1 521 507 539 463 31
39 21 63 52 21 45 85 49 57 30 18
0 4 6 5 0 7 I 7 9 6 9
31 22 48 29 16 23 39 35 40 23 18
5 4 4 9 2 6 7 0 1 4 6
28 17 39 24 7 21 44 22 38 17 11
7 4 6 5 0 4 7 2 1 6 3
29 24 35 24 8 10 39 16 28 13 6
7 2 2 4 9 4 7 4 5 5 4
26 17 30 29 6 in 33 15 29 11 9
9 8 4 6 4 6 5 8 8 0 7
2 4 2 1 1 1
a Includes a l l diagnosed cases, both " o f f i c i a l l y and not o f f i c i a l l y " reported. ^In prior years data were limited to counties with organized health units.
105
Table Α.3
P e r c e n t of new a c t i v e pulmonary t u b e r c u l o s i s c a s e s by e x t e n t of d i s e a s e 3 , by s t a t e , 1967
State United States
Total
Minimal
Moderately Advanced
Far Advanced
100.0
20.5
44.6
34.9
Conterminous U n i t e d S t a t e s
100.0
20.3
44.6
35.1
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkans as California Colorado Connecticut Delaware D i s t r i c t of Columbia Florida
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
15.3 52.6 19.9 16.2 27.0 19.1 24.6 15.4 12.4 18.0
46.2 38.2 42.8 33.5 45.5 50.0 43.7 34.1 37.6 49.1
38.5 9.2 37.3 50.3 27.5 30.9 31.7 50.5 50.0 32.9
Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
15.0 40.9 8.7 17.0 23.2 6.8 28.6 13.9 13.8 28.6
39.2 48.5 34.8 51.0 45.2 35.3 43.9 45.6 46.7 49.3
45.8 10.6 56.5 32.0 31.6 57.9 27.5 40.5 39.5 22.1
Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
22.4 24.3 24.3 29.3 20.3 16.3 33.3 16.3 19.0 19.4
43.9 36.6 44.1 50.6 40.0 39.3 46.0 44.6 30.2 50.0
33.7 39.1 31.6 20.1 39.7 44.4 20.7 39.1 50.8 30.6
New J e r s e y New Mexico New York North C a r o l i n a North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode I s l a n d
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
10.8 29.9 21.7 16.3 36.4 20.0 11.4 37.6 19.2 18.6
43.3 41.5 46.5 36.2 39.4 41.6 54.7 41.5 49.2 41.6
45.9 28.6 31.8 47.5 24.2 38.4 33.9 20.9 31.6 39.8
South C a r o l i n a South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West V i r g i n i a Wisconsin Wyoming
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100. 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
17.0 25.0 23.8 16.9 45.3 24.2 28.4 30.7 24.9 18.6 15.4
30.5 34.5 46.1 44.5 33.3 48.5 37.0 51.4 31.5 51.4 61.5
52.5 40.5 30.1 38.6 21.4 27.3 34.6 17.9 43.6 30.0 23.1
P u e r t o Rico^
100.0
13.3
37.9
48.8
a
C a s e s f o r which e x t e n t s p e c i f i e d . ^Not i n c l u d e d i n t o t a l s .
106
Table A.k
New active tuberculosis cases by form and extent of disease:
each state, 1967
Pulmonary State
Total active cases
Total pulmonary
Primary
Nonpulmonary
Minimal
Moderately advanced
Far advanced
Extent not specified
Unexplained pleurisy
Other
Forra not specified
United States
45,647
40,699
4,415
7 034
15,245
11,926
2,079
693
3,520
735
Conterminous United States
45,189
40,300
4,393
6 874
15,074
11,888
2,071
682
3,472
735
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida
1,379 110 436 497 4,171 256 411 122 423 1,601
1,322 92 391 444 3,686 211 360 104 379 1,462
126 14 52 122 349 30 29 13 78 184
165 40 66 50 897 31 70 14 28 230
499 29 142 103 1,515 81 124 31 85 627
416 7 124 155 915 50 90 46 113 421
116 2 7 14 10 19 47
14
42 18 44 39 411 35 37 18 44 92
1
Ceorgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine
1,223 348 55 2,999 1,069 150 223 1,071 966 120
959 307 47 2,687 988 140 206 1,012 905 98
125 8 1 58 106 16 59 65 14
121 120 4 430 179 9 49 131 101 22
315 142 16 1,289 348 47 75 431 343 38
368 31 26 809 243 77 47 383 290 17
Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire
1,187 910 1,930 394 616 882 109 121 147 44
1,057 802 1,687 329 570 815 86 114 137 41
97 50 276 16 52 144 7 0 74 2
214 178 343 89 101 98 21 15 12 7
418 269 622 154 199 237 29 41 19 18
321 287 446 61 198 268 13 36 32 11
7 18 0 9 20 68 16 13
New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island
1,455 248 5,069 1,247 49 1,548 442 322 2,736 148
1,348 211 4,427 1,066 37 1,393 405 296 2,448 129
159 45 349 150 1 132 9 16 192 9
127 46 722 149 12 222 42 97 433 21
508 64 1,548 332 13 462 202 107 1,111 47
538 44 1,058 435 8 427 125 54 712 45
16 12 750
South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
716 119 1,199 3,209 65 44 1,521 507 539 463 31
592 100 1,111 2,873 50 37 1,453 414 442 405 24
116 15 140 469 4 4 308 42 49 28 2
81 21 226 383 19 8 325 113 80 70 2
145 29 438 1,007 14 16 424 189 ini 194 8
250 34 286 873 9 9 396 66 140 113 3
Puerto Rico 3
1,191
1,140
189
127
360
464
a
-
Not included in totals.
107
_
-
. 74 6 14
_
75
-
-
11
30 6
21 11
-
-
101 112 7 19 8 106 7
16
_ 2 16
_ 3 _ 32 68 7 6 8
-
-
3
-
-
3 150 27 22
23 7 185 74 -
8 2
-
7
_
75 30 θ 312 65 10 15 43 61 19 130 76 141 58 40 59 23 5 10 3 84 30 197 107 12 143 29 24 288 19
9
18 5 9 3
87 18 88 196 15 7 68 75 23 43 4
-
12
39
1
: 141 4
72 -
-
35 -
: -
4 -
36 168 -
_
34 -
2 -
_ -
260 -
12 -
37 -
105 •
6 -
Table Α.5
Number of counties according to level of case rate group: average for 1962-65 New active tuberculosis case
Region and state
United States Northeast Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire New Jersey New York Pennsylvania Hhode Island Vermont North Central Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Michigan Minnes ot a Missouri Nebraska North Dakota Ohio South Dakota Wisconsin South Alabama Arkansas Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Maryland Mississippi North Carolina Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee Texas Virginia West Virginia West Alaska Arizona California Colorado Hawaii Idaho Montana Nevada New Mexico Oregon Utah Washington Wyoming
Total number of counties
Under 15.0
15.0 to 24.9
25.0 to 34.9
35.0 to 49.9
50.0 and over
3,084
1,346
695
448
321
274
217
124
64
19
5
5
8 16 14 10 21 62 67 5 14
7 13 10 9 5 33 36 2 9
1 3 3 1 9 19 22 3 3
1,056
685
102 92 99 105 83 87 115 93 53 88 67 72
_
_
_
-
-
-
1
-
5 7 6
:
-
2
3 1
-
-
-
1
1
238
67
34
32
45 36 99 83 35 74 50 85 43 44 41 50
32 32
14 11
6 9
5 4
-
-
-
-
16 37 10 30 7 7 37 13 17
5 5 3 18
-
1 1
-
-
-
-
7 1 3
-
-
2
10 2
1,394
302
317
321
257
197
67 75 3 1 67 159 120 64 24 82 100 77 46 95 254 105 55
7 1
12 17
16 28 2
18 20 1
14 9
12 35 1 7 2 7 22 21 10 2 170 1 4
27 49 20 28 8 29 22 22 8 11 31 15 18
17 35 25 20 7 30 25 13 13 23 24 25 18
27 36 7 5 12 22 11 11 27 11 34 7
1 3 13 38 2 2 4 9 10 4 32 18 30 8
417
235
76
41
25
40
-
-
-
2 16 6
2 20 8
3 7
1 6 5
-
-
-
-
2
8 8 1 7 12 1 13 2
2 2 1 4
-
2 1 4 12 6 1 1 1
-
_
1 14 58 63 5 44 56 17 32 36 29 39 23
1 10 49 1 33 41 -
9 21 27 22 21
108
-
-
5
-
:
-
-
-
2
-
-
1 3 6 2 -
1
5 1 3
-
Table Α.6
T u b e r c u l o s i s ; numi;er of deaths and death r a t e f o r each s t a t e : 1952, 1957, 1961, and 1965 State
Number of deaths 1952
1957
United S t a t e s
24,861
Conterminous United S t a t e s
Death r a t e
1961
1965
1952
1957
1961
1965
13,390
9 ,938
7,934
15 9
7.8
5 4
4.1
24,621
13,324
9 ,892
7,900
15 8
7.8
5 4
4.1
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware D i s t r i c t of Colunbia Florida
572 173 358 492 1,810 166 248 53 250 504
318 46 223 253 906 110 119 46 110 264
286 19 131 190 620 71 105 26 102 220
260 12 121 109 596 61 84 20 102 216
18 88 42 26 15 12 12 15 31 16
5 3 4 4 4 0 1 6 0 2
10.0 20.2 20.0 14.1 6.4 6.4 5.2 11.0 14.2 6.2
8 8 9 10 3 3 4 5 13 4
6 1 2 5 8 9 1 7 1 2
7.5 4.5 7.7 5.6 3.2 3.1 3.0 4.0 12.7 3.7
Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine
464 67 43 1,575 515 183 161 855 557 102
261 20 20 740 309 79 77 441 302 48
197 27 18 502 267 66 57 307 238 36
150 22 11 431 195 43 42 204 173 29
12 13 7 17 12 7 8 29 19 11
8 0 4 8 4 0 2 2 6 2
6.8 3.4 3.1 7.7 6.8 2.9 3.6 15.0 9.7 5.1
4 4 2 5 5 2 2 10 7 3
9 1 6 0 7 4 6 0 3 7
3.4 3.1 1.6 4.1 4.0 1.6 1.9 6.4 4.9 2.9
642 718 787 205 418 690 77 79 28 47
319 416 448 108 166 394 66 74 25 18
259 304 334 98 116 287 25 37 17 13
201 225 293 68 76 219 22 27 17 9
25 15 11 6 19 17 12 6 15 8
6 5 9 7 2 2 9 1 4 8
11.1 8.5 5.9 3.3 7.8 9.3 10.0 5.3 9.7 3.1
8 5 4 2 5 6 3 2 5 2
2 9 2 8 2 6 6 5 4 1
5.7 4.2 3.5 1.9 3.3 4.9 3.1 1.9 3.9 1.3
New J e r s e y New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode I s land
844 170 2,639 548 53 1,116 321 150 1,825 100
531 100 1,552 222 23 634 162 67 1,031 53
391 68 1 ,165 177 8 468 137 59 881 32
295 68 916 160 11 374 110 39 628 30
16 22 17 13 8 13 14 9 17 12
7 8 3 2 6 7 7 4 3 5
9.4 11.4 9.6 5.0 3.7 6.8 7.1 3.9 9.4 6.2
6 6 6 3 1 4 5 3 7 3
4 9 8 8 3 7 7 2 8 7
4.4 6.7 5.1 3.2 1.7 3.7 4.5 2.0 5.4 3.4
South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West V i r g i n i a Wisconsin Wyoming
360 74 883 1,339 51 58 663 260 321 228 19
190 31 455 793 21 39 331 113 166 138 12
132 20 289 567 28 25 184 83 124 117 8
101 26 248 436 13 21 155 58 89 114 4
16 11 26 16 7 15 19 10 16 6 6
3 3 3 0 0 5 1 6 3 6 4
8.2 4.5 13.1 8.7 2.5 10.3 8.7 4.1 8.8 3.6 3.7
5 2 8 5 3 6 4 2 6 2 2
4 8 0 7 0 4 4 8 9 9 3
4.0 3.8 6.4 4.1 1.3 5.2 3.5 2.0 4.9 2.8 1.2
Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire
109
T a b l e Α.7
T u b e r c u l o s i s deaths and a g e - a d j u s t e d death r a t e s by c o l o r and s e x f o r each s t a t e ,
State
Total
Number of White
deaths
Nonwhite
Male
female
Male
Female
United S t a t e s
32 276
17 963
6 191
5 ,450
2 672
Conterminous United S t a t e s
32 151
17 950
6 187
5 ,382
2 632
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware D i s t r i c t of Columbia Florida
879 66 493 566 2 217 228 321 72 306 669
305 8 321 288 1 396 163 222 33 69 344
138 3 77 92 493 50 62 17 26 105
278 29 61 113 247 9 25 17 138 150
Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine
630 59 57 1 795 787 212 173 982 785 112
218 5 35 1 034 499 144 108 552 324 75
96 1 13 289 189 56 45 280 94 36
197 39 6 332 62 10 17 115 248
Maryland Massachusetts Michigan 3 Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire
789 985 1 105 323 413 908 94 94 52 54
351 709 645 222 121 575 58 59 36 42
130 226 202 85 55 187 11 19 8 11
New J e r s e y New Mexico New York North C a r o l i n a North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode I s l a n d
1 201 225 3 748 587 32 1 490 449 196 2 770 150
665 108 2 097 241 17 864 237 136 1 769 113
South C a r o l i n a South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West V i r g i n i a Wisconsin Wyoming
430 76 1 001 1 801 74 78 692 257 392 370 31
133 29 492 1 039 51 68 263 168 250 239 23
Total
1959-61
A ß e - a d i u s t e d death r a t e White Nonwhite Male
Female
Male
Female
5.4
6.7
2.1
21 2
9.5
158 26 34 73 81 6 12 5 73 70
9.0 18.1 13.3 8.9 4.2 4.1 3.5 5.0 11.7 3.9
8.8 7.0 19.0 11.3 6.0 6.1 5.2 5.5 10.1 4.3
3.4 1.2 4.6 3.1 1.9 1.8 1.3 2.2 2.8 1.4
23 6 56 8 36.6 20 9 15 4 14.8 20 8 20.1 27.2 13 9
12.0 63.6 22.6 12.8 5.2 8.7 8.9 6.1 11.7 5.9
119 14 3 140 37 2 3 35 119 1
5.5 4.1 2.7 5.2 4.9 2.0 2.2 9.6 8.3 3.3
5.5 3.2 3.3 6.5 6.8 2.7 3.0 12.1 10.2 4.8
2.0 0.6 1.2 1.7 2.3 1.1 1.1 5.4 2.6 1.9
15 6 50 25 18 24 10 34 20
6 6 7 0 0 0 9 0 1
7.6 2.9 33.3 9.1 9.9 5.3 2.5 10.4 8.6 16.0
208 34 188 11 135 103 9 10 4 1
100 16 70 5 102 43 16 6 4
8.4 5.0 4.4 2.5 6.4 5.5 4.0 1.9 6.2 2.2
9.4 8.1 5.6 3.6 5.9 7.6 4.7 2.3 8.6 3.7
2.9 2.2 1.7 1.3 2.3 2.3 1.0 0.9 2.2 0.8
31 6 21.0 21 4 19 7 12 8 18 8 28 4 23 7 16 3 15 8
14.4 9.4 7.6 9.4 8.5 7.4 74.2 10.9 13.5
222 74 626 102 11 292 85 39 439 25
216 24 710 160 3 247 68 14 371 6
98 19 315 84 1 87 59 7 191 6
5.7 9.7 6.2 4.6 1.4 4.5 5.3 3.1 6.9 4.7
6.9 10.2 7.5 5.1 1.4 5.8 6.3 4.5 9.6 7.8
2.2 6.9 2.1 1.8 1.1 1.8 1.9 1.3 2.2 1.5
32 2 28 0 37 2 12 5 26.6 24 0 22 5 27 3 31 8 22 7
12.8 23.3 13.4 5.7 2.2 7.7 16.9 16.9 15.1 17.9
41 10 278 460 12 10 110 57 98 99 5
157 17 150 213 8
99 20 81 89 3
6.9 3.3 8.5 6.1 3.1 4.9 5.8 2.6 6.4 2.5 3.0
6.7 2.3 10.5 8.4 4.5 9.5 5.9 3.5 8.8 3.3 4.3
1.8 0.8 4.9 3.4 1.0 1.0 2.0 1.2 3.2 1.3 1.0
18 48 18 13 32
9 4 7 3 4
9.9 63.9 9.2 5.3 10.1
19 14 22 24 11
5 8 5 6 9
9.6 9.5 6.1 9.2 24.3
-
::
21 35 23 1
^ T h r e e - y e a r t o t a l f o r Michigan ( 1 , 1 0 5 ) u n d e r s t a t e d by 2 d e a t h s .
110
-
-
109 11 9 9 2
Table Α.8
Tuberculosis deaths, by state:
State
Total
Age under 1
1-4
United States, 1959-61
5-14
15-24
25-34
35-44
45-54
55-64
65-74
75-84
85 ι ι l at. 70 IMI FILM NO.
c υΝ V
v..
CM
No or Den't Know
CD 2
as. Hove JOY tied ACTIVg military ««fvice before coming here? Ye»
O
1
No
•
29.
2
If v e · , whet brench? If y»t, how eld were you o 1 the time? (Age)
ity nor their prerogative to interpret reactions as "positive" or "negative." The measurements of the reactions are recorded in millimeters on the record card. Special characteristics of the reactions, such as the presence of vesicles, are also noted. Antigens. A single tuberculin, PPD-S, has been used for many years in the research studies of the Tuberculosis Program of the U.S. Public Health Service. PPD-S identifies a particular product, a very large batch prepared by Dr. Florence Seibert in 1939-40 1 and adopted as the international standard for mammalian-type PPD tuberculin in 1952. 2 The amount of protein used in our standard test has also been
T U B E R C U L I N TESTING
PROGRAMS/131
the same for many years: 0.0001 mg, commonly referred to as the 5 T.U. or "intermediate strength" dose. The histoplasmin, identified as H-42, is a culture filtrate of Histoplasma capsulatum, prepared in 1946 by Dr. Arden Howell, Jr., of the Public Health Service.3 It is used in a 1/100 dilution. PPD-B is prepared from an organism now generally referred to as M. batteii, according to the method developed by Seibert for preparing PPD-S. 4 It is used in the same dose (0.0001 mg) as PPD-S in terms of protein. Most of the other skin test antigens used in the Navy program are PPD's prepared from other strains of mycobacteria in our laboratory in Chamblee, Georgia, in the same way as PPD-S and PPD-B. The PPD products are preserved in lyophilized form. Periodically, stock solutions containing 1 mg protein per ml are prepared by the addition of buffered diluent. From the stock, dilutions containing 0.0001 mg protein per 0.1 ml are then prepared as needed. 5 Both the stock and the dilutions contain 0.5 percent phenol as a preservative. In the first years of the program, fresh dilutions were made up by our laboratory every month. Later, when it became evident that under suitable storage conditions the dilutions maintained potency over a period of many months, it was decided to make them only once every four months. 6 Equipment. One-milliliter glass tuberculin syringes (graduated in hundredths of a milliliter) with 26-gauge platinum needles are used for testing. Sterile testing "packs," including the syringes and needles required for each testing session, are supplied from the laboratory. A color coding system is used to help identify the different antigens and the syringes used for each. A piece of colored tape is attached to the label of each antigen bottle, and the syringes to be used with that antigen are identified by a rubber ring of the same color. The tuberculin bottle and syringe, for instance, are always color coded in red, histoplasmin in green, PPD-B in blue, and the color for the variable antigen changes with the product. After use, the supplies are returned to the laboratory for cleaning and sterilization (see detailed description in Appendix A). Personnel. The nurses assigned to the recruit testing program are members of a small team of Public Health Service nurses who spend essentially all their time carrying out the skin-testing activities of the Tuberculosis Research Section. Each nurse is given several months' onthe-job training in the field and in the central office. During this period, she spends much of her time reading reactions with one of the senior nurses. Although reasonably precise performance is usually obtained
132/TUBERCULOUS INFECTION within two or three months, stability of reading takes considerably longer to achieve. Therefore, throughout the duration of the program, periodic checks are made on the comparability of performance among the various readers by means of independent observations of the same reactions. Despite such efforts to develop and maintain uniformity in the testing and reading procedures, some variation seems unavoidable, partly because of turnover in personnel. Because recruits from the eastern part of the country are generally sent to Great Lakes and those from the west to San Diego, the nurses are transferred periodically from one center to the other so that reader differences are distributed as equally as possible among recruits from all parts of the country. Data processing. After the results of the skin tests have been recorded and findings reported to the Navy, the field record cards are sent to the headquarters office of the Research Section of the Tuberculosis Program (Washington). For tabulation and analysis, the information on the field cards is transferred to punch cards and finally to magnetic tape. Recruit population. Of the 665,162 recruits who entered training at the Navy's two centers during the years 1958-1964, a total of 632,870 or 95 percent were tested. At San Diego, where testing was done within three days after the recruits arrived, essentially all (99 percent) were tested. The percentage was lower (91 percent) at Great Lakes, where recruits were not tested until the third to the fifth week after they arrived. By that time, some were already being separated from the Navy, and others missed being tested for a wide variety of reasons. Of the 632,870 recruits who were tested, 10,537 are excluded from the results to be presented here because of incomplete or unacceptable data: 8,461 of these entered training before PPD-B was adopted as a routine test in 1958; others are excluded because their reactions were read earlier or later than the accepted period of two to four days or because information on their age, race, residence, and so forth, was not complete. A small number of recruits were excluded because they did not receive all scheduled skin tests. On a few occasions, so many recruits entered training that the testing schedule permitted giving only the tuberculin test. Also, a few recruits, about 20 each year, were not tested because they were able to convince us that they had had a very severe reaction to a prior test. Table 1 is a summary of the study population of 622,333 recruits, showing subgroups by age, race, and residence. Almost all (611,445, or
TUBERCULIN TESTING PROGRAMS/133 98.3 percent) reported a permanent home address in the conterminous United States.* Most of these men (587,640, or 96.1 percent) were 17 to 21 years of age, and this is the group (enclosed within the box) on which is based almost all the material to be presented. Most (94.8 percent) of these recruits were white.** A limited amount of material will be shown for the small numbers of Negroes and "others." Results for those recruits 22 years and older will be shown only in Appendix Table C. 1, in which frequency distributions of the sizes of tuberculin reactions will be given for major subgroups shown in Table 1. Almost 11,000 recruits reported a permanent home address outside the United States and are listed under "Not Conterminous U.S." Aside T a b l e 1. N a v y recruit p o p u l a t i o n , by age, race, a n d r e s i d e n c e (tested 1958—64) Total All Ages All Races
Total
White
Negro
Other
22+ Years All Races
Total All Places
622,333
594,724
559,625
26,149
8,950
27,609
Conterminous U.S.
611,445
587,640
557,355
26,129
4,156
23,805
10,888
7,084
2,270
20
4,794
3,804
Alaska
825
784
719
1
64
41
Hawaii
1,301
1,247
537
1
709
54
Philippine Islands
7,344
3,884
23
3,861
3,460
Other
1,418
1,069
991
160
249
Place of Residence*
Not Conterminous U.S.
17 - 21 Years
-
18
* Based on home address at time of entry into the Navy.
from inclusion in Appendix Table C. 1, these men will be discussed only in the section of Chapter 2 on foreign residence. They will not be included in the figures in any of the other sections. * T o s i m p l i f y t h e text (and with apologies to A l a s k a and H a w a i i ) , the c u m b e r s o m e " c o n t e r m i n o u s " will generally be o m i t t e d and " t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s " will be used t o refer o n l y to t h e first 48 states and District of C o l u m b i a . Also, b e c a u s e all t h e m a t e r i a l to b e s h o w n f o r the recruits except that in T a b l e s I a n d 8 is based o n m e n 17 to 21 years of age, r e f e r e n c e to age will be o m i t t e d f r o m t h e text. ** E s t i m a t e s based o n t h e first seven years of t h e p r o g r a m indicate t h a t a p p r o x i m a t e l y o n e of every 15 w h i t e males in t h e g e n e r a l p o p u l a t i o n of t h e U n i t e d States w h o a t t a i n the age of 17 m a y be e x p e c t e d to be tested in this p r o g r a m at s o m e t i m e b e t w e e n his s e v e n t e e n t h and t w e n t y - s e c o n d b i r t h d a y . (See A p p e n d i x B.)
134/TUBERCULOUS INFECTION
SURVEYS IN SPECIAL GROUPS
To supplement the results obtained in the Navy recruit program and to obtain information on tuberculin sensitivity in various age-sex groups and groups with special characteristics, the Public Health Service, in cooperation with state and local health authorities, has conducted more than 50 skin-testing programs in 17 states. The selection of study groups has been guided by the desirability of obtaining detailed information on residents of particular parts of the country, not only where reasonably large groups of persons may be tested but also where the bulk of the population may be expected to participate. These programs have included school children, college students, and persons of all ages in selected communities. The procedures followed in conducting these programs have been generally similar to those described for the Navy program with respect to the type of data collected, testing and reading methods, and data processing. The work has been done by the same small staff of nurses who work in the Navy program.
2
/
Tuberculin Reactors among Navy Recruits
CHANGES WITH TIME
The tuberculin testing, year after year, of very large nationwide samples of young men of the same ages, affords a remarkable opportunity to measure changes with time in tuberculous infection in this country. In addition to the current program of testing Navy recruits, results are available for a limited program on recruits tested between September 1949 and August 1951. Thus it is possible to present here an estimate of changes over a 15-year period, 1949 to 1964. Results of the 1949-51 recruit testing program are shown in Figure 2, Map A. The same tuberculin was used in the same dose as in the current program, and testing and recording procedures were similar. However, both testing and reading of reactions were done by Navy corpsmen under the supervision of a Public Health Service medical officer. Also, the 1949-1951 program was limited to recruits entering at San Diego, and too few recruits from the northern tier and eastern states were tested to furnish reliable rates. Thus, detailed results are available only for white lifetime residents of 31 states, from each of which at least 300 men were tested. 1 For these 31 states, the average reactor rate in 1949—1951 was 6.6 percent; no state had a rate less than 3 percent, and nine had rates of more than 8 percent. Figure 2, Map B, shows tuberculin reactor rates for the half million white recruits tested during 1958-1964, who were lifetime residents of the United States. The numbers tested range from about 1,300 for Delaware and Nevada, to over 37,000 for New York, and nearly 52,000 for California. The nationwide frequency of reactors for the 7-year period is 3.9 percent. In 30 states, the rates are less than 4 percent. In 15, located chiefly in the northwest and north-central areas, the rates are less than 3 percent. Six states in the southwest and Appalachian area have rates that vary from 5 percent to a maximum of 8 percent. When an average rate is calculated for the 1958—1964 period, based only on lifetime residents of the 31 states included in the 1949—1951 program, this new rate is the same, 3.9 percent, as the rate based on all 48 states in 1958-1964. As shown in Figure 3, the greatest decreases between earlier and later testing periods occurred in states with the highest frequency of reactors in 1949—1951 (Arizona, Kentucky, and New Mexico). The smallest decreases were in states with the lowest rates at the earlier pe-
Figure 2. Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S: A. tested 1949-51; B. tested 1 9 5 8 - 6 4 (white, ages 17-21)
PERCENT
|: : :l 2.0 - 3.0 3 -1 - 4 0
m
4
U§|
5 1 - 8 0
1-5-0
RATE FOR 31 S T A T E S 6 . 6
•
S.I +
ΠΠ
LESS THAN 3 0 0 TESTED
B. 1 9 5 8 - 1 9 6 4
539,138
TESTED
T U B E R C U L I N REACTORS A M O N G NAVY
RECRUITS/137
Figure 3. Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, tested in 1949-51 and 1958-64 (white, ages 17-21)
(STATES
PLOTTED
ONLY WHERE
300
OR
MORE
TESTED)
Figure 4. Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for those tested during different periods in the 1958-64 program, and for comparison, those tested in 1949-51 (white, ages 17-21)
YEARS
138/TUBERCULOUS
INFECTION
riod. The range of state rates decreased from 3 to 16.7 percent in 19491951 to 2 to 8 percent in 1958-1964. The frequency of reactors in three successive groups of recruits in the current program, and the average rate for the earlier program, are plotted in Figure 4. The average frequency of reactors has dropped at what seems to be a remarkably uniform rate. It was 6.6 percent in 1949-1951; 4.4 percent in 1958-1960; 3.8 percent in 1961-1962; and 3.2 percent in 1963-1964. The observed decrease for the whole 15-year period may be estimated at one quarter of 1 percent per year. The decreases for the country as a whole are reflected to a surprising extent by changes in individual state rates. As shown in Table 2, the drop is continuous for most states from one period to the next. For some, particularly states with small numbers tested, there are irregularities, partly due to sampling variation. It must also be appreciated that, despite all our efforts, it simply does not seem possible to maintain entirely uniform performance year after year, especially in measuring the size of reactions. Reactor rates by state show the same pattern of decrease from 1958— 1960 to 1963-1964 (Fig. 5) as seen between the early and later Figure 5. Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, tested in 1 9 5 8 - 6 0 and 1 9 6 3 - 6 4 (white, ages 1 7 - 2 1 )
Table 2. Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by test period (white, ages 17-21)
TOTAL Alabona Arizona Arkansas California Colorado
NUMBER
TESTED
1949-5]
1958-60
1961-62
1963-64
1949-51
1958-60
1961-62
1963-64
55,706
225,477
161,343
152,318
6.6
4.4
3.8
3.2
1,981 472 1,785 8,490 1,444
3,233 2,205 2,717 21,321 3,486
2,233 1,875 1,788 16,193 2,380
1,708 1,782 1,482 14,452 2,641
5.1 16.7 6.7 9.7 7.2
5.2 6.8 5.2 4.2 4.7
4.3 6.9 4.4 4.0 3.9
4.1 5.0 3.9 3.2 3.0
2,206 388 287 4,019 3,013
2,238 389 305 4,061 2,578
3.3 4.8
3.6 4.8 7.8 4.1 3.7
3.2 2.8 7.0 3.4 3.9
2.1 2.6 3.9 3.3 3.4
_
PERCENT
_
REACTORS
Connecticut Delaware Dlst. of Columbia Florida Georgia
1,469 1,961
3,038 538 386 5,087 4,157
Iddio Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas
708 879 1,125 2,567 1,900
1,581 10,377 6,198 4,812 3,937
1,034 6,600 4,189 3,410 2,896
871 6,897 3,780 3,519 2,907
3.1 8.0 8.8 3.9 4.7
2.3 4.5 4.6 2.7 3.0
1.7 3.5 4.2 2.6 3.1
1.8 3.5 3.0 2.3 1.8
Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts
1,010 1,533
2,927 3,918 1,582 2,848 6,351
1,984 2,702 1,116 2,143 4,451
1,745 2,429 1,132 2,148 4,630
12.9 3.6
9.0 5.7 4.8 8.0 4.0
7.4 5.1 3.2 8.1 2.7
7.0 3.5 1.5 6.6 2.9
10,925 6,162 1,786 6,446 1,617
7,467 4,882 1,109 4,597 1,023
6,302 4,926 889 4,219 1,083
3.4 2.8 4.9 4.2 3.3
2.9 1.6 4.2 3.8 2.8
2.4 1.6 2.5 3.4 1.2
2,676 455 1,131 6,885 1,673
1,856 423 784 5,028 1,308
1,930 461 842 5,018 1,144
2.3 4.0 3.2 4.5 6.5
2.3 2.6 1.9 3.9 4.7
2.2 3.5 1.5 3.4 4.4
14,807 4,121 1,137 12,936 3,527
10,888 2,769 868 9,328 2,576
11,509 2,673 715 8,734 2,202
4.6 3.3 2.6 5.0 4.8
3.7 3.0 2.4 3.7 3.8
3.5 2.4 2.0 3.3 3.2
4,489 14,854 885 2,400 1,220
2,744 10,883 738 1,597 901
2,887 9,817 758 1,466 919
3.2 5.2 3.7 2.8 3.2
2.9 4.2 2.7 3.1 1.9
1.8 3.7 3.2 2.5 1.7
3,694 11,118 1,362 794 2,911
2,790 9,044 869 550 2,067
2,377 8,071 779 517 1,812
8.7 5.9 3.8
5.3 5.1 2.5 4.0 5.0
5.6 5.2 1.7 3.1 4.1
4.8 4.3 2.1 1.7 3.8
5,725 3,175 5,072 795
3,582 1,853 3,343 569
3,481 1,376 3,130 587
6.1
3.1 6.7 2.2 2.6
2.6 5.7 1.8 3.3
2.3 3.9 1.9 2.9
Michigan Minnesofa Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New YoHc North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma
-
-
1,337 2,336 839 1,580 -
601 2,645 -
1,-341 2,170
Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota
1,182 531
Tennessee Texas Ut10mm
Number tested
Percent >10mm
Metropolitan A r e a
Number tested
Akron, Ohio Albany, N . Y . oreo' Albuquerque, N . M e x . A l l e n t o w n , Pa. a r e a ^ A l t o o n a , Pa.
1.5 2.3 2.3 1.8 2.4
675 129 221 273 247
Ann Arbor, M i c h . Asheville, N . C . Atlanta, G a . Atlantic City, N . J . Augusta, G a . - S . C .
3.8 4.3 2.4 5.1 8.5
313 463 1,437 1,312 422
155 416 2,458 265 288
A u s t i n , Texas Bokersfield, C a l i f . Baltimore, M d . Baton Rouge, L a . Bay C i t y , M i c h .
3.1 2.4 5.4 5.0 4.0
869 210 295 925 798
4.0 3.0 2.1 3.4 3.3
354 133 383 682 6,261
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas Billings, M o n t . Binghamton, N . Y . Birmingham, A l o . Boston, M a s s . area ^
1.6 4.3 2.9 4.9 3.2
254 1,529 624 244 563
4.2 12.4 5.0 3.5 2.4
1,276 137 2,822 648 292
Bridgeport, C o n n , area 4 Brownsville, Texas area ^ Buffalo, N . Y . Canton, O h i o Cedar Rapids, l a v a
1.9 4.1 2.7 2.7 4.2
411 197 221 222 332
3.6 0.8 6.4 2.6 4.3
140 118 482 194 467
Champaign-Urbana, III. Charleston, S . C . Charleston, W . V a . Charlotte, N . C . Chattanooga, Tenn. - G a .
3.5 3.4 7.6 3.8 2.4
4.8 5.9 3.6 2.7 2.1
6,652 1,556 2,956 110 235
Chicago, III. Cincinnati, O h i o - K y . Cleveland, Ohio Colorado Springs, C o l o . Columbia, S . C .
9.2 3.7 14.5 5.5 2.7
206 997 124 1,057
3.8 1.8 4.5 2.8 3.9
1,045 169 1,094 464 5,679
1.0 3.2 1.0 10.7 3.8
202 930 101 467 653
3.2 5.4 2.4 2.3 3.6 3.8 2.8 6.0 5.4 3.4
4.1 4.4 4.7 4.1 3.5
958 1,250 253 1,263 372
2.7 2.0 2.7 5.4 3.9
226 198 820 221 232
4.5 2.4 9.4 2.6 2.4
Metropolitan A r e a
Percent >10mm
Number tested
Metropolitan A r e a
G r a n d Rapids, M i c h . G r e a t Falls, M o n t . G t e e n Bay, W i s . G r e e n s b o r o - H i g h Point, N . C . Greenville, S . C .
2.2 4.2 2.6 6.1 5.8
185 238 190 132 572
P r o v o - O r e m , Utah Pueblo, C o l o . Racine, W i s . Raleigh, N . C . Reading, Pa.
Hamilton-Middletown, Ohio Harrisburg, Pa. H a r t f o r d - N e w Britain, C o n n . Houston, Texas Huntington, W . V a . a r e a '
5.0 5.3 2.5 3.2 4.2
341 190 876 347 520
Richmond, V a . Roanoke, V a . Rochester, N . Y . Rockford, I I I . Sacramento, C a l i f .
3.4 1.6 10.7 3.6 4.5
445 488 984 749 488
Saginaw, M i c h . Salt Lake C i t y , Utah San A n t o n i o , Tex. S a n Bernardino, C a l i f , a r e a ' 7 San D i e g o , C a l i f .
Kalamazoo,. M i c h . Kansas C i t y , K a n s - M o . K n o x v i l l e , Tenn. Lake Charles, La. Lancaster, Pa.
4.4 5.9 4.0 4.6 6.9
2,274 425 149 216 612
San F r a n c i s c o - O a k l a n d , C a l i f . Son Jose, C a l i f . Santa Barbara, C a l i f . Savannah, G a . Scranton, Pa.
Lansing, M i c h . Lewiston-Auburn, M a i n e Lima, O h i o Lincoln, Nebr. Little Rock, A r k . orea Ό
2.9 1.8 2.9 4.6 3.1
1,497 169 306 109 424
Seattle, W o s h . Shreveport, L a . Sioux C i t y , Iowa Sioux Falls, S . D. South Bend, Ind.
375 6,406 1,006 157 127
Lorain-Elyria, O h i o Los A n g e l e s , C a l i f , area ' 1 Louisville, K y . - l n d . Lynchburg, V a . Macon, Georgia
2.0 2.1 1.5 4.1 2.2
450 280 198 246 1,287
Spokane, W a s h . Springfield, I I I . Springfield, M o . Springfield, O h i o Springfield, M a s s . area
1.0 3.4 1.4 2.1 2.9
313 438 296 423 1,084
Madison, Wis. Manchester, N . H . M e m p h i s , Tenn. Miami, Fla. Milwaukee, Wis.
3.6 4.0 4.0 3.9 3.7
169 3,280 349 336 1,177
St, Joseph, M o . St. Louis, M o . - I I I . Steubenville, O h i o a r e a l 9 Stockton, C a l i f . Syracuse, N . Y .
Columbus, G a . - A l o . Columbus, O h i o Corpus Christi, Texas Dallas, Texas Davenport, Iowa area 6
2.3 9.0 3.7 3.4 1.2
3,138 356 107 145 347
M p l s . - S t . Paul, M i n n . Mobile, Ala. Monroe, La. M u n c i e , Ind. M u s k e g o n , M i c h , area ' 2
1.9 3.1 4.0 0.9 3.7
634 455 176 106 857
Tocoma, W a s h . Tampa-St. Petersburg, Fla. Terre Haute, Ind. ΤβχαΗΐαηα, T e x . - A r k . Toledo, O h i o
Dayton, O h i o Decatur, I I I . Denver, C o l o . Des M o i n e s , Iowa Detroit, M i c h .
6.4 3.0 3.2 7.9 5.4
486 1,528 343 1,036 10,841
N a s h v i l l e , Tenn. N e w H a v e n , C o n n , area N e w London, C o n n , area 14 N e w O r l e a n s , La. N e w York C i t y , N . Y .
2.9 4.0 8.2 4.2 4.9
205 422 231 503 123
Topeka, K o n s . Trenton, N . J . Tucson, A r i z . Tulsa, O k l a . Tuscaloosa, A l a .
Dubuque, Iowa DVJluth-Superior, M i n n . - W i s . Durham, N . C . El Paso, Texas Erie, Pa.
4.0 4.1 1.6 2.0 2.7
2,172 172 182 460 1,037
Newark, N . J . Norfolk-Portsmouth, V a . O g d e n , Utah Oklahomo City, O k l a . Omaha, Nebr.-Iowa
2.1 3.6 4.0 4.6 4.3
751 139 742 263 368
Utico-Rome, N . Y . Waco, Tex. Washington, D . C . - M d . - V a . W a t e r l o o , Iowa Wheeling, W . V a . - O h i o
250 350 166 605 331
Eugene, O r e . Evansville, I n d . - K y . Fargo, N . D a k . orea 7 Flint, M i c h . Fort W a y n e , Ind.
3.8 3.1 3.3 4.4 8.7
1,671 130 450 5,791 485
Patereon, N . J . area 15 Pensacola, F l a . Peoria, I I I . Philadelphia, P a . - N . J . Phoenix, A r i z .
2.3 4.0 7.8 3.4 5.8
469 173 908 625 139
Wichita, Kans. W i c h i t a Falls, T e x . W i l k e s Barre-Hazelton, Pa. Wilmington, D e l . - N . J . Winston-Salem, N . C .
737 528 166 204 888
Fort Worth, Texas Fresno, C a l i f . Gadsden, Alabama G a l v e s t o n - T e x a s C i t y , Texas G a r y , Ind. a r e o 8
4.6 2.5 3.3 3.1 3.4
5,681 399 399 1,250 2,356
Pittsburgh, Pa. Pittsfield, M a s s . Portland, M a i n e Portland, O r e . - W a s h . Providence, R. 1. area ' ^
2.1
1,639
2.5 4.6
436 1,067
451
Includes Schenectady-Troy. 2 Includes BethlehemEoston, Pa. ( N . J . ) . 3 Includes B r o c k t o n - L o w e l l Lawrence-Haverhill, M a s s . ( N . H . ) . 4 Includes N o f w a I k - S t a m f o r d .
Indianapolis, Ind. Jackson, M i c h . Jacksonville, Flo. Jeraey C i t y , N . J . Johnstown, Pa.
Includes H a r l i n g e n - S o n Benito. Includes Rock I s l a n d - M o l r n e , III. Includes M o o r h e a d , M i n n . Includes Hammond-Ε. C h i c a g o . Includes A s h l a n d , K y . ( O h i o ) .
10 11
12 13 14 15
Includes Includes Includes Includes Includes Includes
N . Little Rock. L o r « Beach. M u s k e g o n Heights. Meriden-Waterbury. Groton-Norwich. Clifton-Possaic.
Worcester-FitchburgLeominster, M a s s . YoH>, Pa. Youngstown-Warren, O h i o
Includes P o w t u c k e t - N e w BedfordFall River, R . I . - M a s s . Includes R i v e r s i d e - O n t a r i o . 18 Includes C h l c o p e e - H o l y o k e 19 Includes Weirton, W . V a .
146/TUBERCULOUS INFECTION metropolitan centers and also for the 22 with fewer than 100 recruits tested are given by county in Appendix Table C.2. The overall rate for recruits from the large cities is 4.2 percent. According to the 1960 census, these cities account for almost two thirds of the population of the United States.4 In a considerable number, the frequency of tuberculin reactors is surprisingly low: in 62, the rates are less than 3 percent; in 101, or more than half, rates vary from 3 to 6 percent; and only in 17 are the rates above 6 percent. Six of these 17 cities (Table 3.A) are located in Texas or Arizona near the Mexican border, where a considerable proportion of the population is of Mexican stock. The Columbus, Georgia, area was the site of two Public Health Service BCG trials; hence the high rate observed there. 5 Most other cities where rates exceed 6 percent are located along the Gulf of Mexico, and in areas bordering the Appalachian Mountains. It should be mentioned that the metropolitan areas where recruit rates are over 6 percent account for only 4.4 percent of the population of the country, whereas those where rates are less than 3 percent account for 10.8 percent of the population. In some states, the range of rates among recruits from different metropolitan centers is small, and in others it is large. In Michigan, for instance, rates range from only 1.5 to 3.9 percent, and in Texas, they range from less than 4 percent in the north to more than 10 percent along the Mexican border. Data given in Figure 8.A and Β show the variations in frequency of reactors for recruits from the counties that make up each of the 24 largest metropolitan areas—those with populations of one million or more. These 24 areas comprise about one third of the total white population of the United States. The overall rate in these areas is 4.4 percent. In some, for instance Minneapolis—St. Paul, the rates are remarkably similar in the different counties that make up the area. In others, such as Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco, there is considerable variation, with higher rates generally in the densely populated central counties and lower rates in the surrounding counties. However, even in the central counties, all rates are less than 10 percent. A special tabulation was made for the 9,294 recruits tested in 1958 1963 who listed New York City as their permanent address (Table 4). All those 17 to 21 years old are included, regardless of race or residence history. The reactor rate for these recruits is 8.9 percent. For the white recruits (who constitute 94 percent of all the New York City recruits) the rate is 8.1 percent, with a higher rate for those from Manhattan
Figure 8-A. Percent of N a v y recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime residents of counties included in metropolitan areas with populations of one million or more (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) < 2.0
4
2.0 - 3.9
6.0 - 7.9
0 - 5 9
m
LESS 100
THAN TESTEO
BUFFALO POPULATION
1,306,957
NUMBER TESTED
2,822
CLEVELAND
DALLAS
POPULATION 1,796,595 NUMBER TESTED 2,956
POPULATION
1,083,601
HOUSTON POPULATION 1,243,158 NUMBER TESTED 1,312
KANSAS CITY POPULATION 1,039,493 NUMBER TESTEO 1,529
DETROIT POPULATION
3,762,360
NUMBER TESTED
'
"
LOS ANGELES POPULATION 6,742,696 NUMBER TESTED 6,406
Figure 8-B. Percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime residents of counties included in metropolitan areas with populations of one million or more (white, ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) I 4.0 - 5 9
1 1 1 20-3-9
MINNEAPOLIS MILWAUKEE POPULATION 1,194,290 NUMBER TESTED 1,084
LESS
I 6.0 - 7.9
ST
100
THAN
TESTED
-
PAUL
POPULATION 1,482,030 NUMBER TESTED 3,138
NEWARK POPULATION 1,689,420 NUMBER TESTED 2,172
PATERS0N, NEW YORK POPULATION 10,694,633 NUMBER TESTED 10,841
CLIFTON,
POPULATION 1,186,873 NUMBER TESTED 1,671
PHILADELPHIA POPULATION 4,342,897 NUMBER TESTED 5,791
PITTSBURGH POPULATION 2,405,433 NUMBER TESTED 5,681
S A N DIEGO POPULATION 1,033,011 NUMBER TESTED 488
SAN FRANCISCO POPULATION 2,783,369 NUMBER TESTED 2,274
SEATTLE POPULATION 1,107,213 1,4!
PASSAIC
ST LOUIS POPULATION 2,060,103 NUMBER TESTED 3,280
WASHINGTON, DC. POPULATION 2,001,897 NUMBER TESTED 742
T U B E R C U L I N R E A C T O R S A M O N G NAVY RECRUITS/149
than from the other boroughs, and a very much higher rate for the group that reported that they had lived for six months or more outside the United States. (Results for the white recruits who were lifetime residents of New York City have been included as an inset in Figure 8.B.) For the 469 Negroes who were residents of New York City, the rate is 19.8 percent; for the 98 who classified themselves as "others," it is 30.6 percent. The differences between the frequencies of tuberculin reactors among white recruits from urban and rural areas are summarized for individual states in Table 5. (See also Appendix Table C.3.) Results are Table 4. Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for residents of N e w York City, by race, type of residence, and borough (tested 1 9 5 8 - 6 3 ) Hoc· of Rosìdvic·
WHITE
TOTAL All
he· Total
All Residence
Lifetime Lifetime Foreign U.S. N.Y.C. Itasidenee N u mber
Total All Ploc«ι Bronx Kinp Quo«« Richmond Mon ho Hon
Bronx King» Qu » o f Richmond Mon ho Hon
OTHER
Some Total Lifetime Lifetime Foreign N.Y.C. U.S. Residence
Total
Tested
9,294
8,727
7,066
1,110
551
469
263
ISO
56
98
1,889 3,148 2,726 487 1,048
1,761 2,975 2,636 475 880
1,415 2,467 2,173 385 626
193 319 374 78 14«
153 189 89 12 108
94 152 82 11 130
51 79 48 7 78
27 51 28 4 40
16 22 6
30 21 8 1 38
8.9
8.1
6.6
6.7
29.6
19.8
15.6
23.3
30.4
30.6
9.9 8.6 6.8 S.I 15.5
8.8 7.9 6.5 5.3 13.6
7.0 6.5 5.8 3.4 11.0
4.1 6.9 6.1 11.5 8.2
31.4 27.0 24.7 (3) 36.1
21.3 18.4 17.1 (0) 23.9
15.7 12.7 (4) (0) 24.4
(8) 23.5 (7) (0) (8)
(4) (6) (3)
(12) (7) (0) (0) OD
Percent Total All Ploo·»
NEGKO
-
12
Re
-
(4)
• Where less tfcon 50 tasted. Hie number of leacton il given in porentheses.
shown for three categories of lifetime one-county residents: lifetime residents of standard metropolitan areas; lifetime farm residents; and other nonmetropolitan residents. The nationwide rate for lifetime farm residents is lower (2.8 percent) than for the other nonmetropolitan residents (3.6 percent), and both are lower than the rate for lifetime residents of metropolitan counties (4.2 percent). This same pattern of differences prevails in most of the states, although there is some variation, particularly in the rates for the relatively few farm residents. Another finding about the recruits in these categories is illustrated in Figure 9. It can be seen that, for each state, the rates in one group corre-
Table 5. Number of Navy recruits tested and percent with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime one-county residents of metropolitan areas, farms, and other non-metropolitan areas, by state (white, ages 17—21, tested 1958-64) NUMBER
TESTED
PERCENT
Total
Metropolitan
Non-Metro poll tan Farm Other
257,470
151,637
27,312
3,454 1,115 2,387 14,706 2,634
1,543 716 442 12,291 1,442
4,797 701 166 2,846 4,089
4,634 468 166 1,525 1,592
Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas
1,069 13,273 7,119 5,999 3,838
Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana
REACTORS*
Total
Metropolitan
78,527
3.8
4.2
2.8
3.6
767 31 886 460 355
1,144 368 1,059 1,955 837
4.5 8.2 4.9 3.7 4.3
5.5 8.5 4.3 3.7 4.3
3.4 (1) 5.0 3.7 2.3
4.0 7.9 5.2 3.8 5.0
20 52
143 181
1.4 2.8
-
294 933
1,027 1,564
3.2 3.4 8.4 3.1 4.0
(1) (2)
-
3.1 3.3 β.4 4.1 3.4
9,138 3,335 1,998 1,143
315 804 794 1,203 722
754 3,331 2,990 2,798 1,973
2.0 3.9 3.7 2.3 2.4
3,526 4,334 2,278 3,978 10,494
1,290 1,821 596 2,828 10,189
906 803 215 147 18
1,330 1,710 1,467 1,003 287
13,461 8,464 1,602 7,120 1,329
9,140 3,989 64 3,850 262
899 1,635 696 1,178 264
Nebraska Nevada N e w Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico
2,950 182 1,487 8,811 1,126
996 141 648 6,989 253
New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma
23,574 5,105 1,406 17,125 3,013
Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota
TOTAL Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Dlst. of Columbia Florida Georgia
Non-Metropolitan Faim Other
-
-
3.7 2.5
5.7 3.3
4.3 3.5 2.8 3.1
2.2 2.9 2.1 1.2 1.8
1.9 3.3 4.4 2.5 2.2
8.1 5.1 3.3 7.7 3.0
8.5 5.9 3.5 8.6 3.1
8.5 4.5 0.9 5.4 (0)
7.4 4.5 3.6 5.5 1.7
3,422 2,840 842 2,092 803
3.1 1.9 3.8 3.8 2.3
3.2 2.4 (3) 4.2 2.7
2.4 1.3 3.9 3.0 0.8
2.8 1.4 3.7 3.4 2.6
688 2 86 92 160
1,266 39 753 1,730 713
2.2 3.3 2.4 3.8 5.9
2.9 2.8 3.5 4.1 4.7
1.6 (0) (0) P) 4.4
1.9 (2) 1.6 2.9 6.6
18,100 1,037 97 11,457 1,025
727 1,293 531 957 631
4,747 2,775 778 4,711 1,357
4.2 2.8 1.1 3.7 3.8
4.8 3.0 (4) 3.9 3.0
1.9 1.9 0.8 1.8 3.6
2.3 3.1 1.0 3.4 4.4
2,693 24,534 1,543 2,842 1,247
1,324 16,691 1,543 676 109
361 887
1,008 6,956
649 431
1,517 707
3.3 4.7 2.8 1.8 4.6
2.8 4.4
-
2.9 4.5 2.8 2.4 2.1
1.9 1.6
-
Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia
4,467 9,910 1,285 1,090 3,098
1,792 6,457 855
1,116 1,018 140 156 601
1,559 2,435 290 934 1,364
5.1 6.1 1.5 3.6 4.3
4.0 6.6 1.8
Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
4,397 3,795 6,399 61Β
2,757 1,056 2,039
449 657 1,154 129
1,191 2,082 3,206 489
2.4 5.4 2.0 3.4
2.4 6.9 2.6
_
-
1,133
-
* Where less thon 100 tested, the number of reocfors is given in parentheses.
-
-
4.3
-
-
2.8 1.6
2.4 2.0
4.3 3.5 0.7 2.6 3.5
6.9 6.2 1.0 3.7 4.7
1.6 4.3 1.6 5.4
2.7 4.9 1.8 2.9
TUBERCULIN REACTORS AMONG NAVY RECRUITS/151
late rather well with the rates in the other two. The significance of this correlation is probably not that the association among the three categories is so strong and the differences among them so small, but rather, that in the United States today the frequency of reactors in the metropolitan areas is so low. The conditions that are traditionally believed to increase the frequency and spread of tuberculosis—poverty, crowding, and more intimate contact with greater numbers of people, not only within but also outside the home—must obviously be more common in the large urban centers of the nation. Moreover, the foreignborn and first-generation Americans tend to congregate in such areas, Figure 9. Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for: A. lifetime residents of metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties; B. non-metropolitan residents, according to lifetime farm and other residence (white, ages 1 7 - 2 1 , tested 1 9 5 8 - 6 4 ) A.
(STATES
B.
PLOTTED ONLY
WHERE
100 OR
MORE TESTE D)
bringing with them high rates of tuberculosis. Yet, despite these conditions, the observed frequency of tuberculin reactors is low. Several factors probably contribute to these low rates. One is the migration in recent years of so many young people, and their children, from rural areas (with even lower infection rates) into the large cities. Although the number of recruits who had spent their lifetimes on farms is small, just under 30,000, the 2.8 percent frequency of reactors would hardly have been credible a few decades ago. Another factor is the continuing migration of the population, again particularly the younger age groups, from the centers of the cities to the suburban fringes. Finally, the concentration in the cities of the antituberculosis efforts of the past
152/TUBERCULOUS INFECTION has no doubt been a major factor in the decrease in tuberculous infection. MOBILITY OF RESIDENCE
When tuberculosis control measures are being planned for a constantly migrating population such as lives in the United States today, it would seem pertinent to ask: "How much tuberculous infection is endemic to an area; how much is being brought in from the outside?" To attempt to answer this question, we separated recruits from each state into two groups: those who had spent all their lives in that state, and those who had at some time lived elsewhere. For the country as a whole, the frequency of tuberculin reactors among 372,289 one-state residents was 3.8 percent as compared with 4.6 percent for the 185,066 not-one-state group. Differences of about the same magnitude are seen in Figure 10 for many of the individual states. In only a few are the rates for the not-one-state recruits lower than for the one-state residents. Appendix Table C.4 shows that migration from one state to another within the United States has only a slight effect on the rates (see also Figure 10. Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for lifetime one-state residents, and all other
P E R C E N T R E A C T O R S - NOT O N E - S T A T E ( o - LESS THAN
1000
TESTED)
RESIDENTS
T U B E R C U L I N R E A C T O R S A M O N G NAVY
RECRUITS/153
Appendix Table C.5). Men who had moved about in the United States but had never been out of the country had, on the average, almost the same rates as those who had lived continuously in a single state—4.0 percent as compared with 3.8 percent. It thus appears that almost all the differences between rates for lifetime and not-lifetime residents of a state are due to the very high frequency of reactors among those who had been born in, or had lived in, foreign countries. New York state furnishes a striking example of the impact of foreign residence. The frequency of reactors for lifetime New York residents is 4.1 percent, as compared with 3.3 percent for those who at some time had lived outside the state but never outside the United States; for the remainder, those with some foreign residence but whose permanent address is now New York, the rate is 21.5 percent. The effect of combining the two groups of not-one-state New York residents, one with a rate of 3.3 percent and the other a rate of 21.5 percent, is an average of 7.3 percent. Although the number of recruits with a history of foreign residence is small, the very high frequency of reactors among them is sufficient to conspicuously affect the rate for the state as a whole (4.7 percent). The frequency of reactors in Utah also is conspicuously higher for not-one-state (4.1 percent) than for one-state residents (1.5 percent). But here the difference is a function not of a high rate for the former, but rather of an exceptionally low rate for the latter—actually lower than for any other state. This extremely low rate can illustrate how another factor, one that has nothing to do with the prevalence of tuberculous infection, can influence observed frequencies of tuberculin reactors, and how important it is, or soon will be, to take account of place of residence, and former residence, in studies of the statistics of tuberculin reactors. Compared with residents of other areas in the country, residents of the northwestern states are relatively free of tuberculin cross reactions. 6 The result is a lower observed frequency of tuberculin reactors. Rates for those who move to the northwest will tend to be inflated by cross reactions because of infections acquired in other areas, particularly the southeastern part of the country. We can see, for example, how migration of long-time residents of Georgia into Utah would tend to raise the overall frequency of reactors for Utah residents, whereas migration in the opposite direction, from Utah to Georgia, would reduce the overall reactor rate for Georgia residents. At the present time, migration of the population within the United
154/TUBERCULOUS INFECTION States may not be responsible for very prominent problems in tuberculosis control work. As tuberculous infection and disease decrease, however, it would seem inevitable that place of residence and former residences will become crucial elements. RACE
One of the items on the Navy field record card (Figure 1) relates to race. Each recruit is asked to check either a box marked "White," "Negro," or "Other-specify." Of the 587,000 recruits who were U.S. residents, about 26,000 checked "Negro," and 4,000, "Other." The latFigure 11. Percent of N a v y recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by region (U.S. Bureau of the Census), by race (ages 17-21, tested 1958-64) REGION
NUMBER TESTED
TOTAL U.S.
PACIFIC
MOUNTAIN
WEST NORTH CENTRAU
WEST SOUTH CENTRAL
£ A S T 0
NORTH CENTRAL
EAST SOUTH CENTRAL
NEW ENGLAND
107,385 Τ0 0 Λ '253 i 7.2 I 0 2,505
I I;
3 4,7 9 0 I 280 30
I
I WHITE
¡ H
OTHER
MIDDLE ATLANTIC
SOUTH ATLANTIC
NEGRO
63,1 0 0 5,4 2 3
II 6 PERCENT REACTORS
TUBERCULIN REACTORS AMONG NAVY RECRUITS/155 ter group specified their race as Spanish, Malayan, Indian, Mexican, and so on, and although some of these terms refer to national origin rather than race, no attempt is made to correct or change them. The recruit's classification of himself is accepted. The overall frequency of tuberculin reactors is much higher for Negro recruits (12 percent) and "Others" (18.4 percent) than for white recruits (4.1 percent). Similar racial differences prevail for all major subdivisions of the country (Fig. 11). Everywhere the frequency of reactors is lowest for the whites, with the Negro rates generally intermediate between the other two. (See also Appendix Table C.5.) For the Negroes, further details of geographic variations in rates are given in Figure 12. Rates are shown for individual states if 100 or more Negroes were tested but are based on combined figures for contiguous states with smaller numbers tested. The lowest frequencies of reactors —less than 9 percent—are found in the northwest and north-central areas. Throughout the rest of the country, the rates generally range from slightly more than 9 percent to just under 13 percent. A few states have higher rates, from 13 to 18 percent (Florida, New York, Connecticut, Maryland, Delaware, and Illinois). Figure 12. Percent of Negro Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S (ages 17-21, tested 1958-64)
156/TUBERCULOUS INFECTION Figure 13. Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for whites and Negroes (ages 17-21, tested
PERCENT REACTORS - NEGRO (STATES
PLOTTED ONLY
W H E R E 1 0 0 OR MORE
TESTED)
Rates are usually higher for Negro recruits who had moved into a state than for those who had lived in that state all their lives. However, for Illinois and Maryland, the states with the highest rates among the Negroes, the frequency is about the same for lifetime and non-lifetime residents. (See Appendix Table C.6.) Comparison of Figures 12 and 2-B will show that, geographically, the frequencies of reactors are quite different for white and Negro recruits. The differences are summarized in Figure 13 for states from which at least 100 Negro recruits were tested. There is a conspicuous lack of association between the state rates for the two races. The conditions that contribute to high reactor rates for one race apparently do not apply, or do not apply equally, to the other. Although the numbers of Negroes are not large, the comparison has unusual validity because both whites and Negroes from all parts of the country were tested by the same staff, with the same products, at the same time. Errors of observation or unavoidable variations in technique should have been distributed uniformly over all groups. CONTACT WITH
TUBERCULOSIS
Beginning in August 1960, each recruit was asked to check on the record card his answer to the following question: "Have you ever lived in the same household with a person who had tuberculosis?" From that time until the end of 1964, 2.8 percent of the nearly 350,000 white recruits checked "yes," that they had had household contact with a case of tuberculosis. As shown in Table 6, the percent of recruits reporting
Table 6. Number of Navy recruits tested, percent with household contact with tuberculosis, and percent of recruits with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, for contacts and non-contacts by state (ages 17—21, tested 1960—64) TOTAL TESTED
TB
REACTORS A M O N G
CONTACTS
Number
Percent
TB Contacts Number Percent
Non-contacts Number Percent
WHITE, AGES 17 TO 21 YEARS, LIFETIME U . S . RESIDENTS 352,876
9,820
2.8
2,253
22.9
10,521
3.1
4,451 4,052 3,735 34,692 5,652
137 197 139 1,209 175
3.1 4.9 3.7 3.5 3.1
40 66 34 242 35
29.2 33.5 24.5 20.0 20.0
156 182 129 1,051 166
3.6 4.7 3.6 3.1 3.0
4,984 866 652 8,992 6,384
134 25 22 202 157
2.7 2.9 3.4 2.2 2.5
37 6 7 45 33
27.6 24.0 31 .8 22.3 21.0
100 18 32 268 205
2.1 2.1 5.1 3.0 3.3
Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas
2,140 15,313 8,936 7,734 6,496
62 431 271 166 166
2.9 2.8 3.0 2.1 2.6
10 96 52 35 26
16.1 22.3 19.2 21.1 15.7
27 450 280 152 136
1.3 3.0 3.2 2.0 2.1
Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts
4,231 5,821 2,489 4,757 10,158
197 143 75 130 248
4.7 2.5 3.0 2.7 2.4
64 26 22 41 69
32.5 18.2 29.3 31.5 27.8
257 248 46 320 227
6.4 4.4 1.9 6.9 2.3
Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana
15,619 10,890 2,302 9,883 2,365
416 274 59 342 64
2.7 2.5 2.6 3.5 2.7
81 43 12 72 3
19.5 15.7 20.3 21.1 4.7
342 152 81 295 49
2.2 1 .4 3.6 3.1 2.1
Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jereey New Mexico
4,194 956 1,842 11,427 2,701
83 33 44 241 90
2.0 3.5 2.4 2.1 3.3
17 5 9 68 20
20.5 15.2 20.5 28.2 22.2
78 25 24 356 107
1.9 2.7 1.3 3.2 4.1
New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma
25,190 6,072 1,813 20,383 5,368
550 151 46 565 166
2.2 2.5 2.5 2.8 3.1
158 36 9 124 35
28.7 23.8 19.6 21.9 21.1
778 135 31 615 168
3.2 2.3 1.8 3.1 3.2
Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota
6,387 23,225 1,689 3,492 2,043
272 460 52 58 38
4.3 2.0 3.1 1.7 1.9
50 148 15 14 4
18.4 32.2 28.8 24.1 10.5
116 817 36 85 34
1.9 3.6 2.2 2.5 1.7
Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia
5,728 19,013 1,858 1,196 4,372
236 538 25 23 127
4.1 2.8 1.3 1.9 2.9
62 126 5 4 34
26.3 23.4 20.0 17.4 26.8
248 820 35 29 148
4.5 4.4 1.9 2.5 3.5
8,028 3,776 7,225 1,304
280 104 167 30
3.5 2.8 2.3 2.3
48 35 24 6
17.1 33.7 14.4 20.0
165 154 116 32
2.1 4.2 1.6 2.5
TOTAL Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Dist. of Columbia Florida Georgia
Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
N E G R O , AGES 17 TO 21 YEARS, LIFETIME U.S. RESIDENTS TOTAL
17,384
537
3.1
191
35.6
1,747
10.4
158/TUBERCULOUS INFECTION contact varied by state from less than 2 percent to nearly 5 percent. In general, the percentage increased with the prevalence of tuberculosis in the state, as measured by the new-case rate (Fig. 14).* Despite what must be regarded as a crude, and probably not very accurate way of obtaining information on exposure to tuberculosis, the answers to the contact question separate the men into two groups with sharply contrasting frequencies of tuberculin reactors. Among the 340,000 recruits who checked "No or Don't Know," only 3.1 percent reacted to tuberculin; among the nearly 10,000 who checked that they had had contact, the rate was seven times greater, 22.9 percent. (See also Appendix Table C. 7.) Among the relatively large numbers of noncontacts from each state, the frequency of reactors ranges from less than 2 percent to almost 7 percent. As shown in Figure 15.A, the reactor rates for these groups correlate rather closely with the new tuberculosis case rates by state, although the findings for Maryland and Kentucky deviate conspicuously from the trend established by the other states. Figure 14. Correlation by state of the percent of Navy recruits with history of contact with tuberculosis, and new tuberculosis case rates (white recruits, ages 1 7 - 2 1 , tested 1960—64; new case rates—white population, 1 9 5 9 - 6 1 )
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Polk County, Minnesota; and Plainville, Massachusetts. Another survey was conducted among the employees of an industrial plant in Austin, Minnesota. Results are given only for whites, because, except in Pamlico, there were very few nonwhites in the surveyed populations. The similarity of the rates among the children of these communities is in sharp contrast with the divergence of rates among the adults. Among the children, reactor rates are everywhere low, though lowest in Plainville and highest in Pamlico. (As noted earlier, rates in the southeast, to some extent, reflect the high prevalence of cross reactions.) Among the adults, the curves fan out after age 25; the Plainville curve rises rapidly, the curve for the Pamlico residents only slowly, and the Minnesota curves are intermediate between the other two. It is not unlikely that the curves shown in Figure 21 represent a framework into which age curves of reactors for many of the white communities of the country would fit. Available evidence indicates that low rates of tuberculin reactors may be expected among the white children and very young adults of most areas today. The rates among the older adults may be expected to vary much more widely, reflecting the Figure 20. Percent of school children with reactions of 10 or more mm to 0.0001 mg PPD-S, by age and sex, and for comparison, percent reactors among college students and Navy recruits (white children and college students, tested 1956—63; white recruits, tested 1958—64) SCHOOL
C H I L D R E N - AGES 3 - 1 7 MALES (23,481) FEMALES (23,064)
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C O L L E G E S T U D E N T S - MEAN AGE - ΙΘ.8 O" MALES ( 8 0 8 3 ) Q FEMALES (6632)
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